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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



LY R 1 C S 



OF 



THE LIVING CHURCH 




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LYRICS 



OF 



THE LIVING CHURCH 



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COMPILED FROM "THE LIVING CHURCH" 



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ED/TED BY 



C. W. LEFFINGWELL 




CHICAGO 

A. C. McCLURG AND COMPANY 

1891 



%"< 



Copyright, 
By a. C. McClurg and Co. 

A. D. 189I. 




preface* 

'T^HE editor of "The Living Church," during the 
first decade of its publication, was several times 
requested to preserve in book form the best of the 
verses which had appeared in its columns ; and a 
literary friend in New York having submitted for 
consideration a number of selections, properly classi- 
fied, the enterprise was decided upon. 

In so large a field to glean from, it is more than 
probable that some grain has been overlooked. There 
may have been errors of judgment in making the 
selections, even though the editor has tried to please 
a great variety of readers rather than in all respects to 
please himself. If there are any verses which seem to 
some unworthy of a place, perhaps to others these 
verses will be prized as the best in the book. It is 
hoped that all will here find something to edify and 
nothing to offend. 

To the handsome setting which the publishers pro- 
pose to give The Lyrics, the illustrations will add a 



Vlll PREFACE. 

charm. A few of them will be recognized as drawings 
from the old masters ; the greater part are original 
designs. 

The number of writers being so large, and the 
addresses of many being unknown, it has not been 
practicable to send proof for correction. Any errors 
to which the editor's attention is called will be cor- 
rected in future editions, if such editions shall be 
demanded, and names of writers not here given will 
be added, if desired. 

THE EDITOR. 



Chicago, a.d. 1891. 




Contentji. 

PAGE 

THE CHRISTIAN YEAR 19 

The Lord's Day. Quinquagesima. 

Advent. Lent. 

Christmas. The Annunciation. 

Saint Stephen's Day. Easter. 

The Innocents. The Ascension. 

New Year's. Thanksgiving. 

The Epiphany. All Saints' Day. 

Septuagesima. The Holy Eucharist. 

POEMS OF CONSOLATION 119 

POEMS OF PATIENCE 147 

LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL POEMS .... 159 

POEMS OF PRAYER AND PRAISE 191 

POEMS OF MEDITATION 207 

POEMS OF CHILDHOOD 229 

MISCELLANEOUS POEMS 239 





Drawn by 

J. H. GRATACAP. 



Frontispiece ^^^^ 

The Nativity 29 

"Looking unto Jesus" 43 

The Innocents 53 

The Epiphany 58 

Penitence (Murillo) 67 

The Resurrection (Fra Angelico) 90 

Whitsuntide Lilies 102 

All Saints' Day 106 

Patience 149 

St. Cecilia (Raphael) 198 

"Far in the West" 199 

Under Magdalene Tower 220 

Montreux 223 

Childhood 230 

Spring 241 

Sunset Thoughts 272 



XU LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



l^eatipteces?* 



PAGE 

Preface . . , vii 

Contents ix 

List of Illustrations xi 

The Christian Year 19 

Advent 24 

Lent 66 

Easter 84 

Agnus Dei no 

Consolation 119 

Patience 147 

Allegory 159 

Prayer and Praise 191 

Meditation 207 

Childhood 229 

Miscellaneous 239 

Psalm XXIII 274 



Ltsit Of aut^otsi. 









PAGE 


A 


. 


The Sister's Vow . . . 


266 


Allyne, Maie . . . 




A Christmas Evergreeri . 


45 






Watting 


147 


Anketell, Rev. John 




Carmi7ia in Node . . . 


219 






Dies Irce 


244 






Thanksgiving Hymn . 


104 






" We would see Jesus " . 


203 


Argent, R. L. . . , 


. . 


The Blessed Morn . . . 


88 


Ayres, Rev, Nelson . 




Alone 


126 






A Gradual 


198 


B, C. H 




''Ask and it Shall be Given 
You'' 








143 


Bailey, Rev. Melville 


K. . 


Saint Veronica .... 


170 


Baker, Brooks 0. . . 




Faith and Works . . . 


263 


Batterson, D.D., Rev. 


H. G. 


An Easter Hymn . . . 


92 


Beauchamp, M. E. (Filia Ec 






clesi.^) .... 


. . 


My Portion Forever . 


. 227 






Surstwi Corda .... 


122 






Two Birthdays .... 


233 


Bogert, Cornelia 




May 


2X6 


BONNEY, CalLIE L. 




. An Easter Song . . . 


89 






Daisy's Easter Gift . . 


. 229 






The Old and the New . 


S6 






Pearls 


. 187 


Brewer, Harriet . . 


. . 


Advent 


• 25 


Browne, Mrs. J. D. H. 




. A Little Child .... 


234 






Lejifs Uses 


76 






The Soid's Lesson . . . 


129 


Buchan, Frances M. 




. My Strength and I . . 


156 


Burgess, D.D., Rt. Rev. 


Alex. 


. Bright Easter Skies . . 


• 93 



LIST OF AUTHORS. 



Burr, Rev. Eli Chrysostom 

C, A. L. 

C, Grace 

Castlemar ... . . 

Chisholm, William B. . . 



Clarke, E. A. ... 
Clarke, Mary Bayard 



Collins, Leila Day . . , . 

Courtland, Brad 

Cowan, Alice Gray . . . . 
Cowper, Rev. Fred. C. 

Crary, Alice 

Cross, D.D., LL.D., Rev. Joseph 
Darden, Fannie A. D. . . . 
Delavan, Erastus C. . . . 

Denton, Clara J 

Dickenson, M.D., Rev. \Vm. 

Francis 

Eaton, Isabel G 



Eckel, Edward Henry 
Ellicott, Annie .... 
England, J. J. L 

Everhart, D.D., Rev. Geo. M 

F.. N 

Feuling, Laura H. . . . 

Finlay, Rica H 

French, Harriet W. . . 

G., C.J 

Garrett, John C 

Gaynor, Elsie White . . 



'■'It is the Lord's Passover 

Watch' 

An Autumn Voice . . , 

Reverie 

The Circle of the Sanctuary 
Birth-Song of the Messiah 
The Feast of Candlemas 
The Annunciation . . 
Stations of the Cross . 
The Ascension . 

Waitiftg 

Unfinished .... 

A Legettd of Saifit Angus 

tine 

A Mansion in Heaven 
Domine, Quo Vadis? . 
'' Oil Christmas all Holy ' 
Via Dolorosa ... 
''As White as Wool" . 
The Heraldijig ... 
Cleanse us, O Lord . . 
A Year in Paradise . 
" Tell me a Tale " . . 

Beyond 

Patty Grimm . . . . 



The Token .... 
Agnus Dei .... 
The Holy Innocefits 
Saint Stephen . 
The Organist . . . 
Easter Song .... 
The Lord is Risen . . 
Glory be to God on High 
The Unreal and the Real 
A Sonnet .... 
Indian Summer . , 
''Vain is the Help of Man'' 
Brother Philip . . . 
"De Imitatione Christi" 
" Good Lord, Deliver Us 
Holy Communion Hymn 
My Cabin ..... 



LIST OF AUTHORS. 



Gordon, Frances E. 
Griswold, F.^Burge 



Griswold, Irene .... 
Heath, Gertrude E. . . 
Hitchcock, Nancy Meneely 



HusE, H. P 

Jewell, Ph.D., Rev. F. S. . . 
Johnson, Frances A. M. . , 
JUDD, Abbie F , 

Kellner, Rev. M. Lindsay , 
Kelsey, Frederick H. . . 

Kidder, May , 

Knowles, Rev. J. H 

L 

Leffingv^'ELL, D.D., Rev. C. W, 



Lindesey, Maria Batterham 

Little, Rev. Arthur W. . . 
Livingston, Mary . . . . 
LocKvvooD, Katharine Read 

Lowrie, D.D., Rev. R. W. . , 

Macrae, F 

Mair, Thomas 



Thine the Power 
'■'■Even as Thoii wiW'' 
Dear Old Santa Claus 
O Vanished Day ! . 
Visions in Oak Hill Cemetery 
Grasping at Shadows 

Tired 

Epiphany .... 
Quinquagesima . . 
Whitsuntide Lilies 
Within the Veil . 
The Message of Love 
The Holy Eucharist 

Lent 

Advent .... 
Cradle Hymn of the Virgi 
All Saints'' Day 
The Higher Wisdom 
'■'■Somebody'''' . . . 
By the Sea . . 
Racine Revisited . 
A Noble Ride . . 
The Innocents^ Day 
New Year's Eve 
Lenten Twilight 
The Ascension . . 
" Thy Will be Done " 
" Peace on Earth " . 
Heroism of the Sea . 

Life 

Hail.' Holy Son of God . 
The Sermon of the Rose . 
The Legend of Saint Doro 

thea 

The Gentle Stranger . . 
In Church Time . . . 
"/ Stand at the door and 

knock'''' . , , 
Septuagesima . , 

Lent 

Morning .... 
Evening .... 



• There was no more Sea ' 



PAGE 

194 
152 

37 
21 1 
248 
207 
124 
58 
63 
103 
108 

255 

114 

68 

25 

41 

107 

236 

121 

242 

250 

257 

51 

55 

61 

100 

136 

29 

243 

190 

40 

180 

163 

94 
22 



224 
62 
69 



119 



XVI 



LIST OF AUTHORS. 



Mann, Rev. Cameron 

Marah 

Mathew, Katharine A. 



May, Rev. John 

McCandless, Rev. J. Heber . 

McKeever, H. C 

McLaren, D.D., D.C.L., Rt. 
Rev. W. E 



McLean, Sidney . 
Mead, Mrs. Jane M. 
Meech, Mrs. J. H. . 



Melville, David 

Mines, Flavel S 

MoONEY, Ella 

Moore, Mrs. J. L 

Morris, Catharine Maria . 
Mylrea, Margaret A. . . . 

Newell, Rev. J. R 

Norton, D.D., Rev. Frank L. 



0. 


R 


H 


G. . . . . 


p 


p. 
p 


A 
T 


B. 
W 




p. 


T- 


W. 





Palmer, M. E 

Parker, Jennie Marsh . . 
Peck, Rev. John Milton . 
Percival, Ph.D., Rev. C. S. 
Perry, Rev. Henry G. . . 
Phelps, Julia E 



Preston, Mary C. . . . 
Putnam, Mrs. S. A. Brock 
Robinson, L. L 



Heaven 

The Lord^s Day .« . . 
All Saints' Day . . . 
Under Magdalen Tower 
The Great Change . . 
Eucharistic Lives . 
Still Ring the Bells . . 

A Spring-Day Hym7i 

The Conversion of the Ceit 

tttrion 

The Shulamite .... 
Cheer zip, Faint Heart . 
" Shall I not see them waiting 

stand V , . . 
Silentitun .... 
The Mercifzil Scribes 
Longi7ig .... 
A Lenten Hymn 
A Lenten Lyric . . 
To my Calendar 
Christ e, Audi . . 
" Give ns this Day our 

Bread'' . . . 
Montrezix . . . 
Gordon .... 
Mary's Birthday . 
The Sculptor . . 
" He Giveth Sttow like 
The Changing Leaf 
The Song of Spring 
''He Leadeth Me" . 
The Bread of Life . 
Psalm XX/H. . . 
The Mistletoe . . 
One Christinas Eve 
Via Solitaria 
Under the Trees . 
A Hymn .... 
A Christmas Carmen 
The Love -Token 
The Messeiiger of Peace 
Lniprisoned .... 



Daily 



Wool 



PAGE 
249 
21 
105 
221 
192 
117 
267 



LIST OF AUTHORS. 



XVll 



Rogers, 0. W. 



Russell, Rev. Edwin B. 

S., A. V. R 

S., E 

S., L 

S., L. D 



S., L. P. ... 
Shaw, Frances A 
Smith, Juliet C. 



Smith, Marion Couthouy 



Snowden, Rev. W. E. . . 
Stanfield, Flora L. . . 

Stilwell, Emma Sophie . 
Taylor, S.T.D., Rev. F. W. 

Thomson, Mary Ann . . . 



Lines on the Picture of a Child 

In May . . . 

Early Communion 

The Recluse . 

The Last Slumber 

" He Leadeth Me " 

A Thought . . 

The Dove that Returned 

More 

No Life for Na ugh t . 
Let them give Thanks . 

Advent 

Law and Love . . . 

Lent 

A Christinas Legend . 
Work and Prayer . 

Waiting 

A Thanksgiving 

At Rest 

In the Printing Office 
Child Wisdom . . . 
From a Happy Heart . 
A Christinas Carol 

Humility 

The Children . . . 
Our Lord in the Blesset 

Sacramcjit . 
Saint Stephen'' s Day 
Easter Thoughts 
Eticharistic Hymn . 
Discords .... 
A Song for Lent 
The Lesson of the Flowers 

Treasure 

Wasted 

The World is Fair 

A Heart-Garden 

The Sister .... 

The Nativity . . . 

Lines to a Chalice . . 

Faith, Hope, and Love 

Aniiunciation of the Blessed 

Virgin Mary .... 
2 



PAGE 

231 
214 

112 

217 
144 

140 

123 

201 
24 

204 
152 
197 

235 
202 

30 
236 



86 

"5 

182 

72 

186 

178 

208 

191 

200 

264 

46 

261 

64 



XVI 11 



LIST OF AUTHORS. 



Thorpe, Rose Hartwick . , 
Tottenham, Edward Hya- 
cinth 

Truesdell, Amelia . . . , 

W., E. M 

W., F. R 

Ward, Katherine N. . . . 
Westcott, Rev. Frank N. 
Whitney, Rev. Hobart B. 
Wood, Josephine Smith . . 



'■As we Look tipon the Dead ' 







91 

«5 


Easter Morn .... 


The Shadow of the Cross . 


75 


Grant us Thy Peace . . 


199 


The Old Year .... 


S7 


Cherith . . . 




^Z1 

138 


A Mother's Logic 




Golden-Rod . . 


. . 


2S4 


Stinsdt Thoughts 




272 




€f)e €f)ri^tian f ear* 



TO MY CALENDAR. 
By Margaret A. Mylrea. 

THE calendar hangs in my quiet room, 
'Neath the picture on the wall, 
Where the morn's pale light, and the evening gloom, 
In softened shadows fall. 

It tells the days of the Christian life, — 

Events, as they come and go ; 
The hero's birth, and the martyr's strife. 

The seasons as they flow. 

It speaks in a monotone to me, 

Of the fleeting, fading hours ; 
How time's dark wheel turns ceaselessly. 

Amid life's brightest flowers. 



I turn the page as the morning song 

Floats over the eastern sea ; 
I join in the glad earth's chanting throng 

" Most Holy ! One in Three ! " 



20 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

And when the day is worn and spent — 
When midnight musings come, 

I close the leaf ; I have pitched my tent 
One day's march nearer home. 

Old friend ! thou wilt hang on my silent wall, 

Thy earthly records keep, 
While morning and evening shadows fall 

Upon my dreamless sleep. 

May I, when loosed is the silver cord, 

Without one single plea 
But Thy shed Blood, say, " Here, O Lord, 

And those Thou gavest me ! " 



THE CIRCLE OF THE SANCTUARY. 
By W. B. Cjiisholm. 



A 



LL times are thine, Church of the Living God, 
And Pillar of the Truth ! 
Be these thy sacred vestibules still trod. 

While yet in ruddy youth 
The new year rings with its dead fellow's dirge, 
E'en to its own last verge. 

The stars and wreaths of Christmas, and the rose 
That 'gainst the sunburst of His Rising glows ; 
For every feast, for every fast, its niche 
In pious hearts, and thus she doth beseech 
Of those yet leal unto her holy bond 
That they in spirit and in form respond 
E'en to the days of her sepulchred saints ; 
These with their holy plaints 
And grateful paeans followed her bright way ; 
Be we as true in this her brighter day ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 21 

THE LORD'S DAY. 
By Marah. 

A PEACEFUL stillness broods o'er all the scene, 
A holy quietness that speaks of rest ; 
The air is fresh, the heavens look down serene, 
The sun moves slowly onward toward the west. 

The harvest fields of gently waving grain. 
The ripening fruits that glisten in the sun, 

Remind us of the merry reapers' strain, 

And speak of labor that has wrought and won. 

But on this quiet Sunday afternoon, 

This day to us most blest of all the seven. 

We banish cares that will return full soon. 

And raise our hearts and turn our thoughts to Heaven. 

It is a season for reflective thought, 

For meditation free and unconfined ; 
The very air with peacefulness seems fraught, 

That stills the nerves and soothes the troubled mind. 

Now stealing o'er us comes a holy calm ; 

Our burdens and our cares are lost in love ; 
And from our lightened hearts we raise a psalm 

Of praise and gratitude to God above. 

And, musing thus, we wonder more and more 
Our Father's love can bear with us so long; 

That He who all our sins and sorrows bore 
Should at our hands receive such cruel wrons:. 



We know He orders all things for our good ; 

And yet, how oft we murmur at His will, 
And in a thankless and complaining mood 

Receive the blessings which our being fill ! 



22 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

But see! The shadows lengthen, daylight fades; 

In thoughts like these, the day has passed away. 
But, as we watch the twilight's deepening shades, 

We thank " Our Father *' for this blessed day. 

And from our hearts a fer\-ent prayer ascends 
That, in the coming days and months and years, 

We may to Him whose wisdom shapes our ends 
Give love and gratitude, not doubts and fears. 



IX CHURCH TIME. 

By the Rev. R. W. Lowrie, D.D. 
[Imitation of Herbert.] 

WHEN rings the church bell, then, be on thy way, 
Not at thy glass. 
As many are, alas ! 
It were, indeed, a sin 
To lose Confession for a final pin ! 
Decently dressed — not gaudily, I pray : 
Go not in state, 
Nor linger at the gate : 
But, eager for the blessings kept in store. 
Pass porchway through, and seek the church's door ; 
And when thereat, 
Lift heart as well as hat : 
And, kneeling, do thou kneel and use each knee, 
On stool or floor, in all humility. 

Be mindful, ever, 't is the house of prayer, 
And, prayer, a key, — 
Though passing strange it be, — 
That turned in ward aright, 
Discovers vv^ealth. exceeding India's quite; 
Not two or three resort but God is there ; 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 

Then mindful be 

Of His Divinity, 
And, in such presence, of thyself be ware, 
And have all reverence and a loving fear. 

Take all thy part, 

With hps as well as heart ; 
And posture keep ; thy body 's surely more 
Than beast dismounted at the church's door! 

To sermon give attendance ; note the text ; 

With ready mind, 

Not critical inclined ; 
The bee did get no sweet, 
Were she not diligent with wings and feet : 
Be not, in church, with worldly cares perplexed; 

Thy friend forget, 

Though he be next thee set; 
Restrain thine eyes that they not wander round. 
And, cheerful, give the alms in duty bound ; 

One thing the more : 

The ritual service o'er, 
For prayer, in silence, heart and knee each bend, 
That worship, so begun, so may it end. 




ADVENT. 

By L. S. 

" T TE comes ! " Clear, through the stillness of the air, 
J- J- Rings the glad warning, " Lo, your King doth 
come ! 
Make straight His path to every heart and home, 
Your thoughts make pure, for His approach prepare. 

" Deck His bless'd house, with fragrant wreaths of pine, 
With spruce and hemlock, and bright holly spray. 
Your loving offerings on His altar lay ! 
Hail Him the Prince of Royal David's line ! " 

Like warrior, listening for commanding word, 
Like virgin, who has watched, through the long night. 
Guarding with care her taper's feeble light, 
To open at the coming of her Lord, 

The Church now rises at the welcome sound. 
" He comes ! He comes ! Oh, joy ! that I may meet 
My Infant King, and worship at His feet. 
Rejoice with me ! The Master I have found ! " 

With hand upon the latchet of the door, 
With ear attent to hear His hastening feet, 
She waits and watches, for her joy complete ; 
" Until He come," repeating o'er and o'er. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 25 

ADVENT. 
By Harriet Brewer. 

THE whole world thrills expectant, 
It waits a Presence sweet ; 
The earth prepares her offering 
To cast before His feet. 

To greet the coming Christ-child 

The oaks glow, far and wide ; 
The heart-blood of the maples 

Rises in crimson tide. 

The birches bear gold for Him, 
It gleams 'gainst pine trees dense ; 

The air of Indian smnmer 
Is faint with frankincense. 

A quiet fills the forest, 

The pines in whispers sing ; 
In stillness loyal nature 

Waits her returninof Kins:. 



ADVENT. 
By Abbie F. Judd. 

WHY tarriest thou my Lord.? 
The shadows deepen early, 
And the chill snowflakes pearly 
Come sadly fluttering earthward through the air; 
The year grows old and weakens. 
We see the distant beacons 

Of the brave and young new year that shineth fair. 
Why tarriest thou, O Lord ? 



26 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Tarry no longer, Lord ! 
Our vision waxeth clearer 
As Advent draweth nearer ; 

And we wait Thy promised coming day by day ; 
Help us to rightly meet Thee 
With loving faith to greet Thee, 
Lift up all bruised hearts along Thy way ! 

Tarry no longer. Lord ! 

Thou tarriest not. O Lord ! 
But comest with the dawning 
Of the clear Christmas morning, 
And in a manger makest Thy natal bed : 
Leaving the fair high places 
To gladden earthly faces, 
Thou bendest mightily Thy kingly Head, 

And tarriest not, O Lord ! 



THE HERALDING. 
By the Rev. Fred. C. Cowper. 

YE little stars that shine above, 
Ye lamps illumining the night, 
Ye sparkling splendors of God's love 
Dotting the spaces infinite — 
Whose path is in your keeping 
While weary worlds are sleeping, 

Do angels pass with fluttering wing 

Adown your avenues of gold, 
To bear a joyful heralding 

To aching hearts of baser mould, 
Who in the darkness dwelling 
Await the welcome tellinsf ? 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 27 

Yes ! to and fro they pass along 

Than the electric shafts more fleet, 
More beautiful than minstrels' song 
Upon the mountains are their feet; 
Good tidings they are bringing 
More sweet than sweetest singing. 

Theirs to proclaim Redemption's Day 

To sinners and to mortal men, 
The day of Christ's imperial sway 

When peace and love shall dwell again, 
Where now are hate and warring 
And sin's unholy jarring. 

Then, O ye blessed, golden lights 

That mark the highways of the King, 
Shine bright upon those angel flights 
That down to earth the Gospel bring, 
A Saviour's birth proclaiming, 
The Serpent's kingdom maiming. 
The reign of Truth restoring. 
All nations Christ adorinsf. 



WATCH ! 
By a. L. C. 

YE know not when I shall come ; 
It may be in morning light 
When the bright sun creeps in your chamber door 

Dispelling the shadows of night. 
It may be in early morning, 

E'er the shadows have left the hills, 
While yet the mist is rising 

From the pools and little rills. 
I bid ye leave the door open. 

So the Spirit may come and go. 
And tell me prepared you 're waiting 

For the hour that ye do not know. 



2 8 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Ye know not when I shall come : 

It may be in noon-day heat, 
When home from the work of the harvest field 

You are turning with weary feet. 
It may be as you sit talking, 

About the long days and your care. 
That the first sweet notes of the Angels 

May be borne to you, through the air. 
So I bid ye watch for my coming ; 

If the door is shut and fast, 
I no longer can plead to enter ; 

I must turn from you at last. 

Ye know not when I shall come : 

It may be when evening gray, 
Is making long, black shadows, 

From the poplars over the way. 
It may be when lamps are burning. 

As your little ones cluster round, 
That faint in the far off heavens 

My coming to you may sound. 
So, watch ! let the house be in order. 

Keep a guard about the door, 
That I — thy Christ — may enter 

And abide forevermore. 

Yea, Lord ! I '11 await Thy coming, 

Be it morning, noon, or night ; 
I will list with the heart of a watcher 

Whose master may come in sight. 
And the door will be always open 

For fear that I, in my sleep, 
May wake too late to unlatch it 

When I hear Thy coming feet. 
So I '11 wait for the time I know not 

When my waiting shall be done ; 
For I only know He bids me watch, 

And says, " I will surely come." 




''PEACE ON EARTH." 

By Maria Batterham Lindesey. 

A CROSS the ages that have rolled 
-^^ Their tide on tide of dross and gold, 
A message comes this Christmas-tide, 
A message for the world so wide ; 
" Peace on Earth." 

Peace to the breast that conflict fills 
A wondrous peace that soothes and stills, 
And all Life's beauty aye fulfils ; 
" Peace on Earth." 

Peace to the heart that mourns its dead, 
Shrinking the onward way to tread, 
And scarcely daring to be led ; 
" Peace on Earth." 

Peace to the soul that cannot soar, 
Groping upon earth's darkened shore, 
Peace and good will for evermore ; 
" Peace on Earth." 



30 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

A CHRISTMAS CAROL. 
By Marion Couthouy Smith. 

TWELVE o'clock on Christmas Eve ! 
Early Christmas bells are ringing, 
Christians all, no longer grieve — 

Let your sighs be changed to singing ! 
Earth is dreaming, fair in seeming, 

Bathed in moonlight, wrapped in snow ; 
Soft stars glisten while we listen 
To that song of long ago ! 

Long ago the heavens were thrilled 

With unearthly song and splendor, 
While in helpless slumber stilled, 

Lay the Christ-child, pure and tender; 
Mary keeping, o'er His sleeping. 

Steadfast watch that mothers know, 
Loving, wondering, mutely pondering. 

In the dark night, long ago. 

Earth lay palled in silent gloom, 

Heeding not the heavenly numbers ; 
He Who broke her ancient doom 

Roused her not from death-cold slumbers ! 
Two saints only, watching lonely, 

Three old sages, journeying slow, 
Shepherds meeting gave their greeting, 

At the King's Birth, long ago. 

Yet all heaven was moved to praise 

Him Who left her courts to save us ; 
And the whole world now shall raise 

Joy-songs for the Life He gave us ! 
Starry regions, angel legions. 

Realms of deepest dark below — 
All were shaken, and o'ertaken 

By His glory, long ago. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 

Six o'clock on Christmas morn ! 

Hark ! the happy chimes are ringing! 
Christians all, the Prince is born ! 

Come, your gifts of homage bringing. 
Earth is waking, dawn scarce breaking, 

Through the dark His altars glow ; 
Here we meet in joyful greeting 

Him who came so long ago ! 



A CHRISTMAS CARMEN. 
By Mrs. S. A. Brock Putnam. 

EVENING had trailed its purple shades 
Across Judea's plain, 
And silvery stars looked down from heaven 

And glassed them in the main ; 
When lo ! from out the dusky east, 

Gleamed forth a meteor bright. 
Which shone as shines no other star 
That gems the brow of night. 

Low hung it seemed, like friendly lamp, 

Betwixt the sky and earth, 
Without a sister of its kind, 

A strange mysterious birth 
Of soft, benignant radiance, 

And lustre pure and clear ; 
No fiery orb of menace dire 

That shakes the soul with fear. 

That star, in far off foreign land. 
Three wise men, watching, saw, — 

Three Magi, in Chaldea famed 
In astroloffic law ; 



32 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

And straightway girding up their loins, 

With pleasure and amaze, 
They, treasure-laden, followed swift 

The sure and steady blaze. 

O'er hill and vale, through field and wood, 

It safely guided them, 
Until it stood wdth broadening beams 

O'er little Bethlehem, 
Above a stable, small and mean, 

Which entering they found 
A mother with a smiling Babe — 

The wondering beasts around. 

A manger was the cradle rude. 

And straw the Infant's bed ; 
Yet shining glory filled the place 

And crowned the Infant's head. 
Then, kneeling low, with reverent awe, 

They gave Him homage meet, 
And laid their gold and frankincense 

And myrrh before His feet. 

For well they knew this gracious Child 

Had come on earth to reign — 
A King, a Priest, a mortal man, 

With all man's care and pain — 
The promised Shiloh of His race ; 

Messias ! as foretold 
In sacrifice and prophecy. 

Since Israel's days of old. 

They left the Babe. No more we know 

Of them, the favored three. 
Who, guided by His natal star, 

The Saviour came to see. 
But far beyond the nether realms 

That stud the arching sky, 
Glad angels and archangels sang 

" Glory to God on high ! " 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 2iZ 

And still throughout the courts of heaven, 

That joyous paean rings : 
" Glory to God, and peace on earth ! " 

Each grateful seraph sings. 
" Glory to God ! " our hearts respond : 

And all our souls, aflame 
With gratitude, and love, and praise, 

Would sing Immanuel's name ! 



ONE CHRISTMAS EVE. 
By the Rev. Kenry G. Perry. 

THANKSGIVING had hardly come and gone, 
When the children kept counting, one by one 
The days until Christmas. The night before, 
A woe-begone woman was walking the floor, 
And spoke to herself in a nervous tone : 
" 'T was little we had for Thanksgiving, alas ! 
And now it is come to a sorry pass : 
There is n't much more than a crust and a bone 
In the cupboard to-day — God help the poor ! 
And ine^ this Christmas, with children four. 
There 's Ned, and Jim, and Prue, and Tim, 
But I have n't a penny for one of them ; 
Not even a capon, to make believe 
We 've a turkey small ! So it goes, and I grieve 
And fret, and drudge for our daily bread, 
Till my heart seems sick and sore and dead." 

The children, meanwhile, where were they all ? 
Ned, and slim Jim, and Prue, and Tim small 
Had been out to gather some sticks that day. 
And coming back in their wonted way, 
Crouched 'neath the window broken and old ; 
There, in the gloaming, ill-clad and cold, 
3 



34 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

They o'erhear the plaint of their mother sad, 
And said to each other, " It is too bad,'' 
As, hands all hold of the string to the sled, 
They passed around silently into the shed. 

" I say," said Ned, " it is too bad ! " Said Prue, 
" I say so too." Said Jim, " But what '11 we do ? "' 
" Let us ask for our daily bread," said Tim small ; 
" There 's none in the house, but our Father feeds all. 
So now we '11 ask, since our dear father 's dead ; 
When he was alive we never lacked bread. 
How well I remember, before he died, 
Reading the good Book one day by his side, 
Where it told of the widow's and orphan's God : 
' Don't forget that,' said he, ' when I 'm under the sod.' 
And, I 'm not going to ! Let us ask of Him, 
Just as we used to 2Lsk father,"" said Tim. 
So down in a corner they knelt in the shed, 
As Hope's hearty utterance heavenward sped. 

Now Gruff, the green-grocer, was striding along 

With Bovus the butcher, when outspoken, strong 

From the shed came the words of the children's prayer; 

The two men stopped short at each other to stare. 

'■'■ Well, well ! " muttered Bovus. " I vow ! " added Gruff. 

" No noise — come away ; such a basket of stuff 

As we '11 make up and leave 'em to-night 

On the quiet ! That 's a very uncommon bright 

Youngster, that Timmy ! Oh, didn't he pray 

Though ? a reg'lar out-and-out Christmas-day 

Trust-the-Lord sort of prayer ! We don't often hear 

It clean-cut Hke that, eh, Bovus ? It 's clear 

To my mind that they are a good little lot, 

And the youngest 's a fam'ly forget-me-not." 

And off through the dark the two men stole, 
While Tim to his mother ran in, and told 
Of a curious noise they heard in the shed 
Just after the prayer for their daily bread. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 35 

But she answered him never a word 

When he asked her, didn't she think it the Lord ? — 

Only sung an odd bit of a sad old tune, 

And said, " 'T will be children's bed-time soon. 

Put a few fresh branches, dear, on the fire, 

And I '11 tell you a story before w^e retire. 

"There once was a King — " " What kind.?" said Tim 

small. 
" King of Kings, they called Him, because for all 
He came, as our Prophet, Priest, and King, 
Peace on earth and good-will, Christ was born to bring. 
And so sang angels at time of his birth, 
' Good-will to men, and Peace on earth ! ' 
After all, children dear, Oh, never forget 
How angels may minister to us yet. 
Though the night be dark, so sure as the bright 
Light of day break, it will all come right f" 

And just as the widow said " right,'" back 

Echoed the word from the door ; while — Thwack ! — 

Whack ! ! Smack ! ! ! three singular 'thumps on the floor 

Of the stoop outside — and they heard no more. 

" It 's the angel ! " said Tim, with a wary crook 

Of his neck about. "Just let 's take a look, 

If no one 's afraid ! " And out with a bound 

He went, and what d'ye think he found.? 

An enormous hamper, that to pull in, Prue 

Ned, Jim, and Tim had all they could do. 

A turkey that weighed twenty pounds if an ounce, 

And parcels of goodies that made small Tim bounce 

Up and down, till at last he fell over flat 

And trod on the tail of the thin tabby cat. 

And then a huge ham, with celery too ; 

Bread, butter, and oysters enough for a stew ; 

Parsnips, potatoes, cranberries, cheese. 

Crackers, sugar, tea, coffee — Please 

Excuse naming all the family found had 

Been packed in that hamper to make them glad. 



36 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

And, rest assured, ere sleep shut iheir eyes, 

From the humble cot to the Lord of the skies 

And earth — great Giver of every good — 

Mother and children gave thanks for the food 

Besought not in vain. Love prompted the deed, 

And kindness responded to urgent need. 

Ah ! httle ones all, let your hearts be true 

To do unto others as you 'd have them do 

To you ! And ye parents, remember the '-Rule,'' 

And while you train them, 'k.^t'^ yourselves in that school. 



OX CHRIST^L-\S ALL HOLY 
By L. D. C. 

OH. what shall we sing 
To Christ Jesus our King 
On Christmas all holy ? 
His praises we "11 sing ; 
Through the sky let them ring 
From hearts meek and lowly. 

What shall we present 

To hail His descent 

On Christmas all holy ? 

Adoration present 

And truly repent 

With hearts meek and lowly. 

Pure gold we will bring. 

Fit gift for a King, 

On Christmas all holy : 

True love we will bring. 

The best offering. 

From hearts meek and lowlv : 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. ^ 37 

Frankincense for the Priest 
Who from sin hath released, 
On Christmas all holy, 
Our souls. O High Priest, 
At Thy heavenly Feast 
Grant hearts meek and lowly I 

Self-sacrifice give. 
And others forgive, 
On Christmas all holy : 
This the myrrh we will give 
To Him who doth live 
In hearts meek and lowly. 

If thus of our treasure 

We give without measure 

On Christmas all holy. 

Kingly Babe, our soul's Treasure, 

Thou wilt dwell — wondrous pleasure ! — 

In hearts meek and lowly. 



DEAR OLD SANTA CLAUS. 
By F. Burge Griswold. 

DEAR Old Santa Claus ! How do you do ? 
I have been looking this twelve-month for you. 
Never has time seemed so weary and slow 
As since the last Christmas, a year ago. 
Where have you been, sir ? What under the sun 
Have you been thinking, and what have you done? 
So many children to welcome your face ! 
So many longing to meet your embrace ! 
Surely you should n't have tarried away ; 
Rather let Christmas-time come every day." 

Santa Claus shook off the snow from his back. 
Loosed and put down his cumbersome pack. 



38 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Threw his fur robes and his gloves on a chair, 
Took his seal cap from his thick, grizzled hair, 
Laughed long and loud at the sweet httle girl, 
Wound on his finger a soft, golden curl, 
Gave her a kiss on her fair, dimpled cheek. 
Then, with a nod, condescended to speak. 

'• M}' little maid. I am right glad to come, 

Bringing good cheer to yourself and your home. 

I 've been as busy as busy could be 

All the long time since you parted from me. 

Such a wide journey all over the world. 

By the swift speed of my reindeers whirled ! 

Now in the valley, and then up so high 

You would have thought I could reach to the sky. 

Sometunes I stopped to buy beautiful things. — 

Candies and toys, silver thimbles, gold rings. 

Dollies and trinkets, and books rich and rare, 

Such as would suit my young friends everywhere. 

Fitting selection is no easy task : 

But to give pleasure is all that I ask, — 

Only to see the dear boys and girls glad 

Fully repays all the labor I 've had. 

I 've been as eager as you could well be 

For the blessed night with the bright Christmas-tree, 

And the old open chimneys, with little sabots 

Placed in the corners, and tiniest hose 

Hung from the mantels, awaiting my sleigh. 

At every benevolent visit I pay. 

Now it is here, I must up and be doing ; 

Other sweet children are worthy the wooing. 

As to your parcels, to-morrow will show : 

You *11 find your red stocking filled up from the toe." 

Was it a dream .^ When the clear morning broke, 
Early the dear little maiden awoke, 

Snow-birds were twittering. 

Icicles glittering. 
Diamonds and pearls making brilliant the scene: 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 39 

Merry bells ringing, 

Gay carols singing, 
Everywhere garlands of fresh evergreen ; 

Hearts beat so merrily, 

Things went so cheerily, 
Harp and dulcimer all the day long. 

Up from the pillow white 

Sprang my sweet little sprite. 
Clasping her hands as she looked o'er the scene ; 

Unto faith's listening ear 

Angel songs were so clear 
Almost she thought to see bright forms on high. 

Eager, yet soft and low. 

Whispered she, " Oh, I know ! 
This is the Christmas Day. Santa Claus dear. 

While I was sleeping 

Came slyly peeping 
Into my room to see if I were here. 

What has he left for me ? 

I will soon run and see. 
First let me thank the good Lord for His love, — 

It would be sad indeed 

If for an earthly greed 
I could forget the great Gift from above." 

Down by her nest of snow 

Knelt she, with face aglow, 
Speaking as if to a visible friend : — 

" Father, I think of Thee 

Gladly and gratefully 
For all the good it has pleased Thee to send. 

But there is one best thing 

Christmas must always bring, 
And only one : 

By Thy most precious grace 

Make my heart fitting place 
For Thy dear Son. 

May I be meek and mild. 

Like to the Holy Child ; 
Let Him be always here in my sweet home. 



40 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

If He will dwell with me, 
All will be well with me ; 
Where the dear Jesus is no ill can come." 

Who saw the wings of gold 

Flutter, and gently fold 
Round that dear object of God's tender care? 

Up in the heavenly place 

" Their angels " see the face 
Of the great Father of faith and of prayer. 

Blessed are these that know 

Such ministry below^ ! 
Blessed the heart of an innocent child ! 

In all humility 

So must we learn to be 
Like unto this little one undefiled. 

Then shall the Christmas-tide 

Blessing and joy abide, 
There will be holy-day throughout the year; 

All of this life will be 

Foretaste of purity. — 
Such as is known in the glorified sphere. 



HAIL! HOLY SOX OF GOD. 
By the Rev. Arthur W. Little. 

HAIL! Holy Son of God, 
By whom the worlds were made ; 
To Thee, Eternal Word, 
Angels their homage paid. 
Wilt Thou in pitying love, 
Ransom us from the grave. 
Stoop from Thy throne above, 
Mighty to save ? 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 41 

Hail ! Son of maiden mild, 
Whom prophets did foretell; 
God, as a little child. 
Comes down with us to dwell. 
Angels, to Bethlehem fly; 
Sing ye Messiah's birth : 
Glory to God on High, 
And peace on earth. 

Hail! God Incarnate born; 
Angels still worship Thee; 
Shepherds, ere break of dawn, 
Hasten their Lord to see. 
Lo ' from the Orient far 
Wise men their offerings bring. 
Led by T^y natal star, 

Own Thee their King. 

Jesus, our Saviour dear. 
We, too, would worship Thee, 
Joining with angels here 
In heavenly minstrelsy. 
Thy love doth never fail ; 
Shall we not love Thee well ? 
Hail ! Mary's Son, all hail ! 
Immanuel. 



CRADLE HYMN OF THE VIRGIN. 

By Abbie F. Judd. 

" "pvORMI Jesu, mater ridet, 

J-^ Quae tam dulcem somnum videt, 

Dormi Jesu blandule ; 
Si non dermis, mater plorat. 
Inter fila cantans orat, 

Blande, veni, somnule." 



4 2 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

" Sleep, my Jesu, tenderly ! " 
Sang a mother long ago, 
'Neath the soft Judean starlight. 
Keeping watch into the far night, 
Crooning lovingly and low, 
" Sleep, my Jesu, tenderly ! " 

" Come, soft slumber, balmily, 
Kiss his eyelids soft and fair," 
Sang the mother, while adoring 
Angels joined the chorus, soaring, 
In strange melody and rare — 
" Come, soft slumber, balmily ! " 

" If thou sleep not, mother mourns," 
Sang the virgm meek ^d mild, 
Clasping close, with pure affection, 
To her bosom's sure protection, 
Jesus Christ, her little child — 
" If thou sleep not, mother mourns." 

" Sleep, my Jesu, tenderly! 

Take thy rest and fear no ill. 
Mother's arms shall safe enfold thee. 
While the wond'ring kings behold thee, 

And with gifts thy cradle fill. 
Sleep, my Jesu, tenderly ! " 



GLORY BE TO GOD ON HIGH. 
By J. J. L. England. 

SING the mystery of Love, 
Tell the wonder of this morn, 
Sing with angel hosts above, 

Christ the Prince of Peace is born ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 



43 



Sing the song that shepherds heard, 
Catch the heavenly strain again. 

Sing of Christ, Incarnate Word, 
Peace on earth, good will to men ! 




Sing, ye wandering orbs of light, 
Blazing in the heavens afar, 

Lo ! from out the shades of night, 
Shines the bright and Morning Star ! 



Mortals join the choirs above, 
On this happy Christmas morn, 

Sing the mystery of love, 
Unto us a Child is born ! 



44 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

All creation join and sing, 
Swell the chorus of the sky, 

Glory to the New Born King! 
Glory be to God on High ! 



BIRTH-SONG OF THE MESSIAH. 
By William B. Chisholm. 

I hear the voices of sweet seraphim 
Tuning the natal hymn ; 
And shepherds resting on the star-lit plain 
Catch up the glad refrain. 

Wild is the wind on lone Judean steep 
That cradles Nature's sleep ; 
Yet winds shall hush in gentlest lullaby 
The Infant Christ-Child's cry. 

Bring richest gifts ! ye wanderers of the East, 
To deck the royal feast; 
Bend low, ye kings, and girdled warriors bow- 
Before your Monarch now ! 

Oh ! deck the shrine of holy praise and prayer 

With all that is most fair 

Of floral garniture, and loudly ring 

Your welcome to the King ! 

Beneath the green and star-bespangled arches, 
A joyous army marches, 
Of the young Child's own chosen little ones, 
Wafting their antiphons. 

Sing to new-born Messiah songs most sweet, 
Here in His temple meet 

For His blest feast ; from garners full outpour 
Harvest and vintag^e store. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 45 

What though skies scowl, and o'er earth's snowy breast 

The nightly shadows rest; 

There is no night in this glad feast of souls. 

Hark, how the anthem rolls ! 

" All glory be to God enthroned on high ; 

To mortals, peace and love ; 
Look down, Thou blest Immanuel, look down, 

With favor from above ! " 



A CHRISTMAS EVERGREEN. 
By Mate Allyne. 

5'TnWAS the merry Christmas eve, and gay 
-L Were the streets of that great city's heart 

With hastening ones, and rich display 
Of beauteous gifts that friends impart. 

There were faces kind, and faces bright 
Of rich and poor, of old and young. 

There were those who walked in God's pure light, 
There were starving ones that throng among. 

And looking down through ether blue 
Were angels who had sung His birth. 

To see what the moving throng would do 
For the Holy Child who walked the earth. 

They saw, in a widow's cheerless room. 

Two little ones with fever burned. 
Whose love had brightened the way of gloom ; 

There, one in the art of healing learned 

Had found them, radiant, though forlorn ; 

For the mother's love had placed between. 
In memory of the Christ-Child born, 

A poor little waif of evergreen. 



S LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Two mottoes hung from the slender tree, 
And the light of tapers two burned there, 

While the sick were pillowed restfully; 
A picture sweet in the room so bare. 

The story he told when lights burned low, 
Where three little stockings brimming held 

Such pretty toys ; with the morning's glow, 
His generous children, love impelled, 

Sent gifts, which the two might waking find, 
Whose faces bright he had seen that eve. 

And the giving made their hearts more kind. 
For the thread of joy small hands could weave. 

Ring merrily out, ye Christmas chimes ! 

For gracious years of the story old. 
Sing His gentle words, these festal times, 

Whose love, in charity sweet, is told. 



THE NATIVITY. 
By the Rev. F. W. Taylor, S. T. D. 

IN humble guise, an Infant fair 
Thou cam'st, our human form to wear. 
O Son of God Most High ! 
In darkest night Thy beaming Star 
Shed o'er the nations near and far 

The light of heaven brought nigh. 

As in Thy Blessed Mother's care 
Thou gently sleepest, earth's keen air 

Trembles with angel songs. 
" Peace on the earth ! To men good will ! 
Glory to God ! " and " Glory ! " still 

The heavenly choir prolongs. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 



47 



In mystic vision, round Thy stall 
Behold great kings and prophets, all 

Of Israel's sacred line; 
While seers of Gentile race proclaim 
The world's desire in Thy sweet name, 

And hail Thee Son Divine. 





SAINT STEPHEN'S DAY. 



By Marion Couthouy Smith. 



bright and bold, 



WHO art thou, Warrior, 
With armor of silver and crown of gold ? 
— The soldier of Jesus Christ am I, 
First of His host that went forth to die. 



What are those palms that o'er thee wave.-* 

— The sign of my victory over the grave. 
Who gave thee power to conquer so ? 

— Jesus Christ on His Cross of woe. 

Why is thy face as calm and bright 

As an angel's standing in God's own sight ? 

— I saw the hght of His eyes and brow ; 
My face, as a mirror, reflects it now. 

What are those stains on thine armor spread ? 

— The blood that for His dear sake I shed. 
What is that trophy thou bear'st in hand.? 

— The stone that slew me at His command. 



What is that ring, as of sunbeams bright, 
That circles thy brow with wondrous Jight.? 

— God opened Heaven, and His rays came down 
About my head, like a shining crown. 

What are those words, so strangely sweet, 
That ever thy smiling lips repeat ? 

— I prayed, " Forgive them ! " and He for this, 
Taught me His sweetest song of bliss. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 49 

Why dost thou beckon and call me so ? 
I fear to follow thy path of woe ! 

— Never fear ! In the ways of pain, 
They who follow find richest gain. 

What is the joy that with thee they share, 
The badge of the Crucified who wear ? 

— No words can tell it — no heart hath known 
The endless joy that He gives His own ! 

How shall I win it, O warrior bright ? 

— Wait on His will by day and night ; 
Bear all for Him, and like Him forgive, 
So with Him shalt thou die — and live ! 



ST. STEPHEN. 
By Isabel G. Eaton. 

HE stands the first of those the Master willed 
Should wear the Martyr's crown. 
First of the glorious ones whose blood was spilled. 

Through all the ages down. 
His youthful feet pressed on that mystic way, 
The royal road of human agony, 
Nor feared he shout nor frown. 

Thou with the angel-face ! Transfigured ere 

The spirit left its clay, 
What heavenly voice commands thy listening ear 

That thou the call obey ? 
It is the Lord ! The heavens opened wide, 
Thy mortal eyes the sinless One descried, 

Beckoning thy soul away. 

Not long thy toiling in the Master's field. 
Not long the race to run, 
4 



50 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Though wondrous fruits thy tireless labors yield 

From rise till set of sun. 
O eager soul ! with zealous love aflame 
To teach the world the power of Jesus" Name, 

Too soon thy victory won. 

But though thy hands shall never celebrate 

The Sacrifice divine, 
Offered by those who at His altar wait — 

The mystic Bread and Wine — 
No Sacrament thy soul immortal needs, 
On Jesus glorified thy spirit feeds, 

The Church Triumphant thine ! 





THE INNOCENTS' DAY. 
By the Rev. C. W. Leffingwell, D.D. 

THE merry Christmas bells have ceased to ring 
Their Alleluiahs at the Saviour's birth ; 
The happy choirs are still, they cannot sing 
To-day their song of joy in heaven and earth. 

The m. anger-cradle is forsaken now ; 

Not even there, the Saviour's head may rest. 
Thorn-crowned already is that placid brow ; 

The sword, even now, doth pierce the mother's breast. 

Her Child shall live to bear the cruel cross, 
But all the babes in Bethlehem are dead. 

Poor Rachel mourns, and knows not, in her loss. 
How Christian mothers may be comforted. 

They know, as she knew not, the gracious end 
In all these dealings of the blessed Lord, — 

How in His tender mercy He doth lend 
These httle ones to witness for His word. 

To Him alone all years of life belong; 

He knoweth when to give and take away ; 
For His high purpose weakness is made strong, 

A thousand years are counted as a day. 

Ail life and death His providence fulfil, — 
The days of childhood and the years of man ; 

No life so short that doth not do His will. 
No death so early as to fail His plan. 



52 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

The Holy Innocents of Bethlehem., 

And all sweet children that have ever died 

Are safe with Him ; no harm can come to them, 
No one can take them from the Saviour's side. 

Though absent, still, O Rachel ! they are thine ; 

Such earthly loss, in Paradise is gain. 
Set full with stars, in Heaven their crowns shall shine 

Their little lives have not been lived in vain. 

Then keep with chastened joy the children's day ! 

O mourner ! see, by faith, the happy throng 
Around the Lamb, there evermore to stay 

And sing before the throne the blest new song. 



THE HOLY INNOCENTS. 

By Isabel G. Eaton. 

" Not in speaking, but in dying, have they confessed Christ." 

SWEET flower-faces ! seen through fronds of palm, 
Whose golden aureole 
Refiects a light born of no earthly charm, 
Given each infant soul. 

Slain for the Christ-child whom they never knew, 

Have they the story learned '^. 
For His eternal glory,- children too 

The martyr's crown have earned. 

Haste, little ones, the risen Christ to meet. 

Who bade your souls go free ! 
Go follow in His train, and kiss His feet, — 

Your eyes shall opened be, 



54 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH, 

To see immortal visions, fairer far 

Than given to earthly eyes ; 
Your souls be pearls of Heaven — each a star. 

To shine in Paradise. 

Sweet Innocents ! The holy angels learn 

With you this mystery : 
How Lov^e Divine could from His Kingdom turn, 

And God Incarnate be. 

In golden carols He your lips has blessed, 

To mortal speech denied ; 
In speaking not, in dying ye confessed 

The Christ once crucified. 

Lead, little feet, our own to wander through 

The streets of Paradise ! 
Through mists the stars shine dim — but to our view 

The hills of heaven arise. 

Our hearts are faint, our steps are slow — but He 

Who called the children home 
Pleads that the Vision Blest our souls may see. 

O come, Lord Jesu ! come ! 



NEW YEAR'S EVE. 
By the Rev. C. W. Leffingwell, D.D. 

THE night is starry, bright, and clear, 
With moonlight glimmering on the snow 
And midnight winds, with voices low, 
Sing dirges for the dying year. 

How strangely beautiful the night! 
And yet to some, alas, how sad ! — 
Whose hearts, last New Year gay and glad, 

Are now bereft of hope and light. 

Unwelcome too to him, in truth, 

Whose tyrant memory will not sleep. 
But brings back from oblivion's deep 

Each folly of his wasted youth ; 

Reminds him of the golden days 
That have departed, one by one, — 
The little good his life has done, 

And all the error of his ways. 

But hark ! The bell strikes twelve o'clock : 
A year has passed, to come no more ; 
And as we hsten, at the door 

We seem to hear a stranger knock. 

Old Year, I pray we part as friends ! 

Sincerely we can say " Adieu ! " 

And as we welcome in the New 
We promise him to make amends, — 



56 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

We pledge ourselves to nobler deeds, 
To loftier thought, and purer life, 
To be more faithful in the strife 

For what our nobler nature pleads. 

Remembering all the solemn past, 
Its lessons treasured in the heart. 
So we will hve and act our part 

As if this New Year were our last. 



THE OLD AND THE NEW. 
By Callie L. BoxNtney. 

AT portal of the heavenly land. 
Where beauteous pearl gates gleaming stand, 
The Old Year waits. 
His earthly work and mission done, 
To yield his regal crown to one 
Beyond the gates. 

His silver hair in fading hght 

Has caught the gleam of sunset bright, — 

A halo fair, — 
It touches with majestic grace 
The noble beauty of his face, 

And lingers there. 



His aged hands a volume hold 
Where story of his reign is told, 

Its loss and gain, — 
Some spotless pages, writ in gold ; 
While others legends dark unfold 

Of wrong and pain. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 57 

But joyous bells proclaim at last 
The Old Year's reign is of the past ; 

And open gates 
Admit to earth a youthful King, 
While golden chimes exultant ring 

And Hope awaits. 



THE OLD YEAR. 
By F. R. W. 

Here we have no continuing city. — Hebrews xiii. 14. 

OH that the pilgrim years would sometimes stay ! - 
Stay for a little where the palm-trees bend, 
And with the willows in the trembling stream 

Their shadows blend ! 
Alas ! they may not stay ; for through the sandy plain 
And rocky vale life's journey must be pressed 
To its true rest. 

But as we leave behind our happy days, 

Though thought of change may bring the rising tear, 

Yet to the future dim we turn our face, 

And feel no fear ; 
For He who through the burning desert guides 
Knows when the weary feet need healing balm 

And nights of calm. 

No fear that little ones with tender limbs 
Should be o'erdriven by the Love that leads ; 
Labor and rest are set by One who knows 

All our hearts' needs ; 
And while our tents are struck or pitched again 
At eve, alike, O Lord, our souls can rest 

On Thy dear breast. 




THE EPIPHANY. 
By N. M. Hitchcock. 

THE Christmas carols die away, — 
The strains of holy mirth 
With which that blessed natal day 
Is hymned by heaven and earth ; 
The Church in triumph now doth sing 
That Bethlehem's babe is Christ the K 
And, w^hile the Magi bend the knee, 
She hails his orlad Epiphany ! 



Once over trackless realms of night 
The voice of God was heard, — 
The voice that said, " Let there be light !" 
And light sprang at the word. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 59 

The morning stars then sang for joy ; 
A nobler theme is our employ 
When, Light of Lights, we bow to Thee, 
Hailing Thy blest Epiphany ! 

Streaming with dazzling beams from heaven, 

Shineth the light of day, 
White with prismatic colors seven 

Mingling in one pure ray : 
Thus with the " seven-fold gifts " divine 
The Sun of Righteousness doth shine ; 
And as His glorious beams we see 
We hail His bright Epiphany ! 

And, kneeling at His feet, implore 

Our path may be the way 
That shineth ever more and more 

Unto the perfect day; 
Till in the heavenly city bright, 
That needs of sun nor moon the light, 
We, in His likeness clothed, may be 
Blest in that great Epiphany ! 



THE FEAST OF CANDLEMAS. 
By W. B. Chisholm. 

WITH burnished lamps and bright 
In dim midwinter hght 
Let altars gleam, and for thy festal theme 
The Christ-Child in the temple : there behold 
Long waiting Simeon, — seer and holy sage. 
Last relic of the old Hebraic age ; 
Rejoicing he to welcome this the Child 
Whose star of late made glad the winter mild. 



6o LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

The sheaves of glad ingathering 

Are withered now, 
And the tiny buds of nearing spring 

Shiver beneath pathless snow. 
O soul, hast thou no flowers 
To glad these holy hours ? 
No garden, thou my heart, 
Warmed by thy pious art. 
Screened from the north-wind's breath ? 
Is it winter all, and death ? 
Shall not sweet Candlemas be gay 
With rose or marigold, I pray, 
Wreathen with green of Yule ? 
There in the frozen pool 
Methought the hly raised its head 
From its ice-tomb, pale and dead, 
If it might but honored be, 
Culled and laid on the altar there, 
While the sweet strains of festivity 
Gladden the morn's chill air, 
And the lamps of Candlemas grow bright 
O'er the dark midwinter night. 




THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 6 1 

LENTEN TWILIGHT. 
By the Rev. C. W. Leffingwell, D.D. 

THROUGH the twilight into darkness, 
Daylight glories gently fade, 
And by exquisite gradations 

Sunlight passes into shade ; 
Ever between light and shadow 
Some soft middle-tint is laid. 

As in all the world around us, 

So through all the world within ; 
Daylight joys in twilight linger 

When our nights of grief begin ; 
Over sadness broods the memory 

Of the gladness that has been. 

In the Church, by such transition, 

Changes now the Christian year ; 
And between the light and shadow 

Mellow middle-tints appear — 
God's great love and glory blending 



Ere the Lenten shadows deepen. 
While before our dazzled eyes 

Fades Epiphany's greal splendor, 
Blessed twilight veils the skies. 

And the star of Bethlehem lingers 
Over where the young Child lies. 



62 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

SEPTUAGESIMA. 
By Thomas Mair. 

I^HE Christmas gariands withered lie 
Upon the frozen earth, 
Type of the soon forgotten vows 
We made at Jesus' birth. 

The rosy flush of early morn 
Has changed to noontide's ray, 

As Hfe's first hopes and joys depart, 
When trials crowd its day. 

The guiding star no longer leads 
The pilgrim's onward way, 

Through gloom and desert to the place 
Where once the Saviour lay. 

But Lord, Thy weary feet once trod 
The path our feet must tread, 

And Thou hast felt the pain and grief 
Which bow each drooping head. 

To Thee alone we look for aid, 
Though love seems faint and chill, 

For Thou hast felt the tempter's power 
And foiled his work of ill. 

We ask not that Thy loving care 

Bid earthly sorrow flee ; 
For pain and anguish, by Thy grace, 

Bring contrite hearts to Thee. 

We only pray that Thou wilt make 

Qur souls, by worldly loss. 
More like to Thine, that we may share. 

The blessings of Thy Cross. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. ()T^ 

QUINOUAGESIMA. 

By N. M, Hitchcock. 

THE Church doth many lessons teach 
Of faith, and hope, and love, 
She bids us learn their blessedness 

And all their sweetness prove. 
As through the " Christian zodiac " 
The hallowed seasons move. 

Now as the Lenten warning sounds. 

She calls to fast and prayer. 
That all our works are nothing worth 

Unless that love we share, — 
The love that led the sinless One 

For man the cross to bear. 

She bids us learn the charity 

That seeketh not its own ; 
She telleth us how mighty love 

Did for our sins atone, 
And how our Elder Brother bore 

For us the cross alone. 

Her voice we heed, and pray Thee, Lord, 

For the perfect charity. 
Without which, whosoever lives 

Is counted dead by Thee — 
That gift of gifts, which greater is 

Than to know all mystery. 

Knowledge shall fail and pass away. 

The gift of tongues shall cease ; 
But charity remams for aye. 

The very bond of peace ; 
Oh ! send Thy Holy Spirit, Lord ; 

Our charity increase ! 



64 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

So shall we keep the '• Feast of feasts," 
With hearts from self set free ; 

So shall we dwell in perfect love, — 
Thy children's liberty ; 

So shall we hear the Master say, 
" Ye blessed, come to me ! " 



FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE. 
By Mary Ann Thomson. 

FOR Faith that conquers earth ; 
For Hope, our anchor sure ; 
For Love, of heavenly birth, 

That, fadeless, shall endure ; 
Let praise ascend to God above, 
Giver of Faith and Hope and Love. 

By faith we look on God 

By mortal eye unseen ; 
We mark His guiding rod. 

And on His staff we lean ; 
The banner of the cross unfurled 
We grasp, and overcome the world. 

By hope our spirits soar 

To join the victor band, 
Who on the blissful shore 

With crowns and palms shall stand. 
Like ships that safely anchored lie, 
Are hearts whose hope is set on high. 

By love our souls we yield 
To God, who deigns to call ; 

And strive that all be healed 
By Him who died for all ; 

Faith, hope, and k>ve our hearts uplift, 

But love, we own, the greatest gift. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 

Faith shall give place to sight 
When earth shall pass way 

And hope, to sweet delight. 
When dawns eternal day ; 

But love refined, where all is pure 

To endless ages shall endure. 





A LENTEX LYRIC. 
By Catharine Maria Morris. 

AMID the shadows let me lie 
Where Thou didst agonize and die. 
While my soul lifts its mournful cry ! 
Mea culpa! 

Of all Thy human nature bore, 
The tempest's rush, the billows" roar. 
The wandering feet from sea to shore. 
]Mea culpa I 

Faint by the wild Tiberian sea, 
All spent and worn by Galilee, 
Mighty to save, we cry to Thee. 
Mea culpa! 

No plea have I from guilt and sin. 
Xo claim the heavenly home to win, 
Only Thy pardoning " Enter in." 
Mea culpa ! 



Above the cross, above the tomb. 
Through all the Lenten shadow's gloom, 
Doth light ineffable illume I 

]\Iea culpa ! 



68 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

LENT. 
By Frances A. M. Johnson. 

KNOW ye the Shepherd's voice? He calleth thee 
To leave the highways and the busy throng 
On wealth and pleasure bent, to climb the steeps 
Of sacrifice and chant the Lenten song. 

He calleth thee to mountain solitudes 
Where the world is not, but He its Saviour is ; 
There to thy peaceful soul he will reveal 
Himself and His most holy mysteries. 

As to the world will He not speak to thee ; 
Thou shalt behold His face, transfigured, shine, 
And heaven descend upon the mountain's brow 
Enfolding thee in clouds of light divine. 

And if in duty's path thou find'st delight 

In fond obedience to His gentle call, 

Thou 'It meet Him somewhere every day ; thy home, 

A Bethany, will know His footsteps' fall. 

If thou give but a cup of water cool 

To do Him service, by the shady well 

Thou 'It find him resting when thou com'st to draw. 

And in thy heart shall living waters swell. 

And when the paschal moon at midnight moves 
Above the olives of Gethsemane, 
Tracing thy shadow and thy Saviour's on 
The sward His feet pressed in His agony; 

While Kedron murmurs o'er its stony bed, 
He '11 tell thee all the wonders of that night 
When Love Divine did sweat great drops of blood, 
And angels strengthened Him for Calvary's height. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 69 



LENT. 

By Thomas Mair. 

A S the soft gleams at daylight's gentle close 
L\. With ling'ring beauty fill the scene with peace; 
When the low murmurs of the woodland cease, 
And every care is soothed to sweet repose 
That life in fervid noontide never knows, — 
So com'st thou, Lent, to bring my soul release 
From thrall of sin ; to cleanse the soiled fleece 
Of Christ's own flock in that pure stream which flows 
Forever living from His riven side. 
We rest beneath the shadow of the cross 
Where once He hung, and though the world counts loss 
Glad joys resigned, if we with Christ may bide 
And share His sorrow, all the rest is dross, 
For we shall gain the life for which He died. 



A LENTEN HYMN. 
By Mrs. J. L. Moore. 

HEAR Thy servant's meditations, Lord of light and 
love divine ! — 
Hear my sad soul's supplications, and incline my will to 

Thine ! 
I have suffered long and sadly, and my soul in darkness 

pines ; 
But to Thee I turn, oh, gladly ! — on Thy truth my heart 

reclines. 
May this time of prayer and fasting, all these hours of 

holy rest, 
Brino^ me treasures everlastinsf, be to me a season blest. 



70 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Purge my heart, O Lord, and try me, but with mercy's 

gentlest touch ! 
No good thing of Thine deny me ! Let me love Thee 

overmuch ! 
Thou canst see my pride and passion, all my faults and 

follies view ; 
Thou canst with divine compassion see my faults, and 

pity too. 
Thou alone canst give me pardon, Thou alone affliction 

stay : 
Take from me, most blessed Warden, sin and suffering 

away ! 
Fit me for the heavenly mansion, where alone is perfect 

peace, — 
Where the soul, with sweet expansion, shall in godliness 

increase ; 
And at last, when life is over, and this v/eary spirit free. 
Take me, Jesus, Friend, and Lover, — take me home to 

dwell with Thee ! 



VIA DOLOROSA. 
By Brad Courtland. 

ECCE HOMO!" said the Roman prelate Pilate, 
stern and loud ; 
Answered back with fierce revilings the hard-hearted 

Jewish crowd -, 
Came then from the grand Praetorium, with head thorn- 
crowned and bowed, 
The Royal Victim stately, and behold, a palhd cloud 
Shadowed Via Dolorosa, as the Roman prelate proud 
Washed his hands before the rabble, and in trumpet 

tones and loud 
Said the ban on every Jewish child and parent in the 
crowd. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 71 

The Royal Victim, bending underneath His weight of 

woe, 
Climbed the Via Dolorosa eighteen hundred years ago, — 
Left behind the glorious city bathed in richest Syrian 

glow, 
While the branching limes and olives, swaying gently to 

and fro, 
Kissed the heated brow of Him whose faltering steps and 

slow 
Climbed up Via Dolorosa, fainting 'neath that weight of 

woe, 
Jeered by the Jewish rabble eighteen hundred years ago. 

Let us veil our Christian faces, we the Christians of 
to-day ! 

" Crucify Him, Crucify Him,'' did the Jewish rabble say! 

Does no other heartless rabble catch the note from far 
away. 

As it comes down through the ages of the dimming cen- 
turies gray? 

Lo ! the warm Egyptian lilies, blooming now as bloomed 
for aye ; 

And the meilow Syrian sunset gathering jewels from the 
day! 

Hear again the wandering echoes, " Crucify Him,"' do 
they say ! 

Floating down the tide of ages comes again the muffled 

strain — 
"Crucify Him, Crucify Him! on our children be the 

stain." 
Drooped the gorgeous Syrian lilies, nestling in the golden 

grain — 
On the Via Dolorosa did the Kingly Victim drain 
All that bitter cup of anguish ; still the solemn, sad 

refrain 
Is sent back through all the ages, " He is crucified again." 
And ahke on Jew and Gentile rests the seal of His blood 

stain. 



72 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

A SONG FOR LENT. 
By Flora L. Stan field. 

THE happiest time ? If my halting rhyme 
Should herald the happiest days 
That ever appear in the Christian's year 

And call us the Lord to praise, 
It would turn to a song, with a purpose strong, 

To honor this season sweet 
When we meet with Him in the dawning dim 
And kneel at His sacred feet. 

The loveliest hue ? It is neither the blue 

That lives in the cloudless sky, 
Nor the blush which glows on the face of the rose 

As the sunbeam passes by ; 
But the royal tint that its kisses print 

On the cheeks of the passion-flower, — 
The violet sheen that is fitly seen 

At the Lenten trysting hour. 

The sweetest tale ? Let the thoughtless rail 

At the joy which the sick soul finds. 
As the story old of the Cross is told 

And the Lenten scroll unwinds. 
But we rejoice, as the preacher's voice 

Grows faint with the hallowed theme, 
To think that we may his hearers be 

And the Lord's own servants seem. 

And so we tread, divinely led. 

In the path that His patience tried. 
And we share His fast that we may at last 

With Him at His feast abide. 
We do not mourn for the garments torn 

In the fray with the scoffing world, 
As we walk each day where he leads the way, 

With our violet flag unfurled. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 73 

LENT. 
By L. D. S. 

WITH whispered pleadings, soft and low, again 
The Saviour speaks in every heart and home, — 
I go to bear my cross in bitter pain : 

Wilt thou not, too, take up thy cross, and come ? 

' Thou didst my praises at the Christmas feast 

With happy heart continually sing ; 
Thou wentest with the wise men of the East 

To my poor cradle costly gifts to bring. 

■ Would'st thou still wear the crown, yet bear no loss ? 

Smile when I smile, yet never with me weep ? 
W^ould'st thou enjoy all gain, yet feel no loss ? 

Through all my agony for thee, still sleep ? 

Oh ! if I left a heaven of perfect bliss. 

That thou mightest some day have it for thy home, 
Wilt thou not do so small a thing as this, 

And when I call, take up thy cross and come? " 



"GOOD LORD, DELIVER US." 
By C. J. G. 

FROM all the toils of evil men, 
From words unkind and hearts untrue, 
From secret griefs which may have been, 
From cherished guilt of every hue — 
Deliver us, good Lord, 
According to Thy word. 



74 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

From all the leprosy of sin. — 

That inward fretting, deep and dread, 

That loathsome plague which spreads within, 
And living, counts us with the dead — 
Deliver us, good Lord. 

From wandering feet which slip and slide 
Far from the blessed paths of peace, 

From every ill which may betide, 

From all that stays our soul's increase — 
Dehver us, good Lord. 

From all assaults of death and hell. 
All base allegiance with the foe — 

Beguihngs which we see full well, 

And subtle snares we may not know, — 
Deliver us, good Lord. 



From all half-hearted fealty. 

Oh !" gracious Father, Helper, Friend, 
From all ingratitude to Thee, 

Who lovest Thine own unto the end — 
Deliver us. good Lord. 

By Thy divine and perfect grace. 

The love which makes us one with God, 
By the compassion in Thy face ; 



By all the lame Thy hand hath healed, 

By all the suffering ones restored. 
By all the blinded eyes unsealed : 
Deliver us, good Lord. 

By every precious drop of blood 

For our redemption once outpoured, 
By every hour on shameful rood — 
Dehver us. ffood Lord. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 75 

By every throb of mortal pain, 

By every trembling nerve and cord, 
By all Thy loss — our dearest gain — 
Deliver us, good Lord. 

Since Thou for us didst deign to die, 

O Son of Mary, Son of God ! 
Then by Thy last expiring cry — 

Deliver us, good Lord, 

According to Thy word. 



THE SHADOW OF THE CROSS. 
By Amelia Truesdell. 

I SAW a peasant woman bent and old. 
With dusty footsteps tread the broad highway 
A burden on her patient shoulders lay ; 
Her brow bore trace of sorrows m.anifold. 

I saw where one — perhaps for sins untold — 
Had raised a wayside cross of massive stone ; 
Beneath its shadow where a fountain shone 
She rested on the cool and fragrant mould. 

When heavy on me weighs life's load of care. 
Till other touch were more than I could bear. 
And o'er my soul there steals a solemn rest. 
So sweet it could be none but heavenly guest. 
Then know I that the Cross of Calvary's tree 
Has cast its healing shade of peace on me. 



76 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

LENT'S USES. 

By Mrs. J. D. H. Browne. 

" T IFE has so little joy ! " I hear you say, 
J — i " And not a passing hour but brings its trial ; 
'T is well for those who tread the flowery way, 
To pause awhile and practice self-denial ; 

" But as for me, it almost makes me smile, 
For all the year is Lent in fullest measure ; 
Where every day brings with it care and toil. 

Think you the need is great to turn from pleasure ? 

" Ah ! it sounds well, this giving up the world, 

For those whose hearts are sated with its sweetness ; 
To rest at anchor with the white sails furled, 
Then on again, in sunshine and in fleetness. 

" But as for me — I have no time to rest 

And lose myself in saintly contemplation ; 
No need to fast from what I never taste, 
Or put aside what never is temptation." 

Ah, friend ! it is because your lot is hard, 
Because you walk in dry and stony places, 

Because God's precious gift of life is marred, 
And lacks for you its common good and graces, 

That I would have you pause, and turn aside 
Into the Lenten shadow, calm and holy, 

There for a little blessed space abide, 

Laying your burden down and kneeling lowly. 

For cares, no less than pleasures, may be bars 

To shut out God ; and 'neath our burdens bending 

We grope our weary way beneath the stars, 

Nor ever see the heavenly light they're lending. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 77 

Ah, friend ! it is because of way-worn feet 
And hearts that hunger for a richer dower 

Than toil and care, that there is this retreat, 

Wliere we may learn God's nearness and his power. 

Shade of a " Great Rock in a weary land," 

Shade of the Cross, its precious burden bearing ! 

Here may we learn to grasp the pierced Hand, 
And rest upon the Heart our sorrow sharing. 

Here learn the awful secret of His Love, 

The pity, passing knowledge, still forgiving ! 

Here find the Peace, which* //??> world cannot move. 
The joy of loving and the grace of living. 



By Alice Crary. 



JESUS ! our feet are travel-stained and weary 
With wand'ring through the self-made path^of sin ; 
Master, the way we trod was long and dreary, 
And now we come to Thee, Oh, take us in ! 

Oh, wash our feet, dear Lord, and turn them homeward ; 

Thy feet for us toiled up Mount Calvary, 
Thy feet for us were pierced in bitter anguish. 

Oh, let the precious blood-drops fall on me. 

O Christ, these weary hands were used against Thee, 
And now, bound fast by Satan, helpless lie ; 

Begrimed by sin, all torn and bruised and bleeding, 
In pity loose and heal them ! Hear our cry ! 

Thy hands, O loving Saviour, toiled for us, 
Thy hands, O Jesus, raised the sick and dead. 

Thy hands in weakness bore the heavy burden, 
Thy hands, O Lord, for us were pierced and bled. 



78 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

O Christ, behold our heads now bow'd in sorrow : 
We bring them tired and aching to Thy breast, 

The mind obscured by doubts and thoughts of evil; 
Forgive, O Lord ! and give the weary rest. 

Thy head, O Jesu, now in glory crowned, 

Gave forth the bloody sweat of agony ; 
And then, dear Lord, with thorny crown encircled, 

Bowed low, and dying gavest Thy Life for me. 

Remember in Thy kingdom, Lord, Thy passion, 

Remember, too, our human frailty, 
And in Thy mercy, grant Thy absolution 

And give Thy strength that we may conquerors be. 

Oh, wash us. Lord, and cleanse us from all evil. 

From strength to strength lead us, dear Lord, we pray. 

That in this world our part of loving service 
May win the Part that fadeth not away. 



HUMILITY. 

By Marion Couthouy Smith. 

OH, last, best grace of all ! 
When we have striv'n to soar in pride and strength 
Toward glorious heights of soul, serenely fair, 
Dreaming to dwell thus in a pure air. 
But our poor wings have failed — how sweet at length 
To let the struggle go, and in Thine Arms to fall I 

But teach me. Lord, while yet I can withstand — 
Ere I must drop, for very weariness. 

And failure's cruel stress — 

Now to fly low, and lay my strength and pride 
Down in the hollow of Thy pierced Hand, 

For love alone, since Thou my King wert crucified. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 79 

THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS. 
By William B. Chisholm. 

THY Lord's last weary hours, 
Before thee on the canvas luminous, 
Speak to thy heart amid these gaudy bowers. 
Amid the maze of earthly leaves and flowers. 
The sight of Him, the Lamb Vicarious, 
Who is the Very Paschal Lamb for us, 
May sober thee ; and hft thy earth-bent eye 
To gaze upon this last great mystery. 

Behold the awful passage up the hill ! 
Dost thou discern one ray of sympathy ? 
Look at that Roman sentinel ! He stands 
Poising his spear between his horny hands, 
Spear that shall pierce the Mediator's side, 
Spear that to crown transformed is glorified 
In this thy gaze ; it pierced thy Lord, but then 
That Blood redeemed thee. Even so, Amen. 

Oh, Simon of Cyrene ! seems it hard 

That thou awhile must bear that heavy load, 
While He of Nazareth shall seize brief rest? 

Prouder than laurel wreath that decks the bard. 
Or star-gemmed crown upon dead hero's breast, 

Be this to thee ! Go hence to thine abode 
Tear-dimmed; yet like a conquering monarch go, 
With this one thought : that thou hast borne for Him 
For one brief spell the burden that shall lift 

All other weight from lost humanity. 
Whereon shall hang the harps of seraphim 

In the immortal ages yet to be ; 
There, there it stands at noon-day strange and dim. 

An awful portent 'gainst the darkened sky. 

Yet is it life and light and victory ! 



8o LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

O thou, august o'er all sweet womanhood, 
Thou ever blest and ever holy one. 
Gazing, tear-dimmed, upon thy bleeding Son, 
Behold thy King ! and in this beam of wood 
On which a bleeding Sufferer He hangs, 
Forget, O Virgin blest ! a mother's pangs. 
And mortal yet, and human e'en as we. 
Low at His Cross behold the Deity! 

O sun of Judah, veil thy stricken face ! 

O graves, give forth your olden, saintly dead ; 
O temple veil, in sunder rent, give place 

To His new temple of the heart and life ! 

Past is the awful strife ; 

The sacrifice complete ; 
At morning, where the angel hosts have led 

To His dear tomb, prepare your King to greet ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 



THE ANNUNCIATION OF THE BLESSED 
VIRGIN MARY. 

By M. a. T. 

THROUGH the sins and sorrows 
Of four thousand years, 
Earth has watched and waited, 

Smiling through her tears ; 
Watched to greet the dawning 

Of a brighter morn ; 
Waited for a Saviour, 
Man, of woman born. 

Now the blessed Dayspring 

Cometh from on high ; 
Now the world's Redeemer, 

To her aid draws nigh ; 
Bearer of the tidings, 

From the throne of light, 
To a lowly maiden, 

Speeds an angel bright. 

In the chosen daughter 

Of King David's line, 
God fulfils the promise 

Of King Ahaz' sign. 
Gabriel hath spoken ; 

Mary hath believed ; 
And, behold, a virgin 

Hath a Son conceived ! 

Earthly sire He hath not; 

For the promised rod 
Of the stem of Jesse 

Is the Son of God ; 
6 



82 LYRICS OF THE LIVIXG CHURCH, 

Virgin pure the temple 
Where He lies enshrined, 

Hoi}- One of Jacob, 
Hope of all mankind ! 

Though He take our nature, 

Linked to low estate, 
Though He stoop to suffer, 

Yet shall He be great ; 
Though His crown and sceptre 

Be of thorn and reed ; 
His shall be the kingdom, 

Sworn to David's seed. 

Light to lighten the Gentiles 

Bending at His throne ; 
Glory of His people, 

When His sway they own. 
He shall reign forever, 

King of kings confessed ; 
And all tribes and kindreds 

Shall, in Him, be blest. 

Through the brightened ages, 

O'er the ransomed earth, 
All shall bless and honor 

Her who gave Him birth ; 
Her of whom, incarnate, 

Came the Lord of all. 
To uplift creation 

From the primal fall. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 83 

THE ANNUNCIATION. 
By William B. Chisholm. 

HAIL! beauteous Mother! Hail! 
Wealth and bloom we bring to thee, 
Ere yet the wondrous tale 
Rings over earth and sea, 
Blest be thou, o'er all earth's daughters blest I 
Gladly now our hearts proclaim Annunciation's feast. 

Upon thy virgin brow 

Sits innocence enthroned ; 
And motherhood's sweet presence now 
Its lighter lines have toned ; 
Thou hast no jasper palace trod nor unveiled glories seen ; 
Yet o'er thee rests the aureole of heaven's unstinted sheen. 

Hail ! fair Madonna ! Hail ! 

O'er all thy sisterhood, 
Transcendent image of the true, 
The beautiful, the good; 
All generations shall rise up and welcome thee the blest. 
As in the holy calendar that heralds thy high feast. 




THE LORD IS RISEN. 
By J. J. L. England. 

OUR hearts with bitter grief were sad 
But yesterday ; 
This morn rejoicing they are glad, 
For Christ hath risen from the dead, 
And Death and Hell are captive led ! 



The sealed stone before the tomb 

Is rolled away ! 
Light piercing through its deepest gloom 
Reveals no captive in that prison, 
For lo ! the Lord of Life hath risen ! 

Where now thy victory, O Grave .'' 
Or, Death, thy sting? 
Jesus with mighty power to save, 
He Who on yonder cross was slain. 
Hath risen from the dead again ! 

Shout, all ye glad angelic throng, 

And mortals too ! 
Join ye in one triumphant song. 
The Lord hath risen from the dead ! 
The Lord hath risen as He said! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 85 

Wide let the glorious anthem roll, 

In loud acclaim ! 
Circling the earth from pole to pole, 
Till far and wide the tidings spread, 
The Lord hath risen from the dead ! 



EASTER MORN. 
By Amelia Truesdell. 

CHRIST'S woe is done ! Let Easter sun 
Shout "glorias" to the morn! 
For now on earth in second birth 
The Promised One is born. 

The smitten grave its Prisoner gave, 
Nor dares to claim Him — -dead; 

For glory shone on virgin stone 
Where lay th' anointed Head. 

The purple scorn, the plaited thorn, 

For Him beloved are o'er ; 
The hour of gloom, the cry of doom. 

Shall bow the heavens no more. 

From seraph throngs grand Easter songs 
Ring out through all the spheres ; 

For now is done the work begun 
In Judah's vale of tears. 

Then bind the cross with softest moss, 
And wreathe with garlands round ; 

Put lilies fair in chaplets where 
That radiant head was bound. 



S6 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Aye, sing on earth this heavenly birth, 

That all shall live who died, 
That Christ has risen, that Death's dark prison 

His form has glorified. 

And answer loud, ye faithful " cloud 

Of witnesses " above ; 
Low at his feet the song repeat 

Of Jesus' Easter love. 



EASTER THOUGHTS. 
By the Rev. "VV. E. Snowden. 

IN the spring morn the Easter bells 
From town and hamlet tower, 
Cathedral domes and lowly dells. 

Their joyous anthems pour. 
Ring out, ye bells, your cantinells ! 

Air, with the music quiver ! 
Christ in the tomb no longer dwells ; 
He lives and reigns forever. 

All the wide air is full of sound, 

Rejoicing, triumphing ; 
The hills give back the glad rebound. 

The Easter carolling. 
The teeming earth looks up to-day 

To greet her risen Lord ; 
The buds swell and the year's decay 

Lives at His quickening word. 

As erst in Bethany He stood 

Beside the silent tomb. 
His voice gave life its plenitude 

Within that darkened room. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 87 

So ever in His universe, 

In all the bounds of time, 
All things His hving power rehearse 

And feel His life sublime. 

Because He lives they also live, 

Because He rose they rise. 
Each spring each flower their virtues give, 

And Easter prophecies. 
The ice, the winter's frozen breath, 

A living flood shall be, 
Springing exulting from its death 

And sparkling to the sea. 

The sleep that lies, a lethal veil, 

On man from eve till morn 
Is broken by the sun's " All hail ! " 

We rise, to hfe reborn. 
The showy plant in all its pride 

Fell with the year's decay . 
Root hid in earth and seed that died 

Now feel the Easter ray; 

And lo ! a fairer, other growth. 

Other and yet the same, 
Risen from earth in glorious youth, 

Shall Easter truth proclaim. 
The chrysalis in loathly shell 

Its poor dull Hfe lays down ; 
We seek its dead within that cell, — 

" 'T is not there ; " it has flown ! 

A butterfly, with plumage bright, 

It swims in upper air 
From the dark prison of its night. 

And keeps its Easter there. 
The chrysalis to death is given, 

The shell bursts, and a thing 
Of beauty scales the airs of heaven 

With never-tiring wing. 



LYRICS OP THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE BLESSED MORN. 
By R. L. Argent. 

FROM sin's dark, gloomy prison-house we rise 
Into the freedom of a purer air, — 
A freedom none of earthly mould may share 
Save who have offered willing sacrifice 
Of self and sense. 

From dreams of doubt and darkness we awake 
To see the lamps of hope and joy alight, — 
To view the world in rarer raiment dight 

And feel, as we of heaven's grace partake, 
New life from thence. 

The Easter sunlight floods earth's utmost length, 
The Easter blooms make all ways fragrant-fair, 
The Easter bells proclaim upon the air, — 

" All Easter blessings flow from Him, our strenjcth 
And our defence ! '" 



EASTER SONG. 
By Annie Ellicott. 

BIRD in the zenith, airily circling. 
Why upward thy flight and so joyful thy lay ? 
Cometh the answer, thrilling with rapture, 

" The Saviour hath risen ! 'T is Easter to-day ! " 

Flowers, the woodland gemming so brightly, 

Why waken ye now ? 'T will be long 'ere 't is May 

Wind-bent, the blossoms joyfully murmur, 

" The Saviour hath risen ! 'T is Easter to-day! " 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 89 

Breezes, why blow ye, so softly, so gently ? 

Why linger not here with the grasses to play ? 
" Hymns from the earth to heaven we are wafting ! 

The Saviour hath risen ! 'T is Easter to-day ! " 

Soul, when the birds, and the flowers, and the breezes 
Praises are singing, earth-bound will you stay ? 

Join in the anthem that rises to heaven, 

" The Saviour hath risen ! 'T is Easter to-day ! " 



AN EASTER SONG. 
By Callie L. Bonney. 

IN shade of death the world doth sleep, 
While white-robed angels vigils keep 
O'er stone-bound tomb ; 
And night-winds whisper requiem low, 
While shadowy forms flit to and fro 
'Mid cypress gloom. 

When lo ! a heavenly radiance falls. 
Reflected from the jasper walls. 

Where pearl-gate gleams ; 
The heavy stone is rolled away. 
While dawning resurrection day 

With glory teems. 

No more the cypress and the tomb, 
Where now immortal flowers bloom. 

Bright, fair, alway ; 
Life's King, in majesty divine, 
Makes resurrection blessing thine, 

On Easter Day. 







^'IT IS THE LORD'S PASSOVER."' 
By the Rev. Eli Chrysostom Burr. 

ALL hail, dear Risen Lord ! all hail ! 
'Tis past, the grave, the cross, the nail 
'T is past, the breaking hearts, the wail ; 

Alleluia ! 

All hail, dear Risen Lord ! no trace 
Of Calvary's woe hath marred Thy face. 
All hail ! Redeemer of our race ! 
Alleluia ! 

We sought Thy grave, and angels cried : 
•' Ye seek Him who was crucified ; 
Behold ! He is risen, glorified." 
Alleluia ! 

On Friday, — darkness, death, the tomb ! 

To-day, — light, life, and Paschal bloom ! 

The Risen Christ hath chased the gloom. 

Alleluia ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 91 

The new-born earth, in spring array, 
With full, adoring love doth pray 
Beneath Thy nail-pierced feet to-day. 
Alleluia ! 

"What mean ye by this service? " cries 
The wondering world ; the Church replies : 
" It is the Lord Christ's Sacrifice." 
Alleluia ! 

Angels who throng the starry ways 
Take up the glorious strain we raise. 
And Heaven's foundations shake with praise. 
Alleluia ! 



EASTER. 
By Edward Hyacinth Tottenham. 

NOW does old hoary winter, faltering, 
Retrace his footprints to the icy North ; 
And many a guerdon of long-wished-for Spring 
O'er hill and dale is gently budding forth. 

But yesterday the solemn Lenten fast 

Did bow the head and make the bright eye dim ; 
So has the Lenten Miserere passed 

To the fair lustre of the Easter hymn. 

We live two lives upon this little earth, — 
One life around us, and one life above : 

Flowers, and birds, and our immortal souls. 
Are all controlled by one hand of love. 

Chase then thy cares ; and with untiring wing. 
Fly with thy sins to Jesus' wounded side : 

So shall thy life be one perpetual Spring, 
Thy death, an everlasting Easter-tide. 



92 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

AN EASTER HYMN. 
By the Rev. H. G. Batterson, D. D. 

ALLELUIA! Alleluia! 
Alleluia sing to-day ! 
Christ has opened death's dark prison, 

Bright the tomb wherein He lay. 
Sing with gladness, Alleluia ! 
He has brought Eternal day. 

Sing, ye Christians, Alleluia ! 

Darkness from the grave hath fled; 
Sing ye joyous Alleluia ! 

Christ is now our King and Head ; 
Lift your song with thankful voices, 

He is risen from the dead ! 

Sing, all nations. Alleluia! 

Christ is victor o'er the grave ; 
Sing again loud Alleluia ! 

He has passed through Jordan's wave ; 
Oh, how glorious is the triumph ! 

He is mighty now to save ! 

Sing once more the Alleluia ! 

In this happy Easter-tide ; 
Sing, undaunted. Alleluia ! 

Now is healed the Wounded Side ; 
Christ, of death the First-Begotten, 

Is our Brother, Friend, and Guide. 

Bring the lilies, bring the roses. 
Let the altar gleam with light ; 

Shout with rapture. Alleluia ! 

Christ has conquered death and night ; 

He, our Paschal Lamb, will feed us, 
Guard us, keep us, in His might ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 93 

BRIGHT EASTER SKIES. 
By the Rt. Rev. Alex. Burgess, D.D. 



B' 



RIGHT Easter skies! 
Fair Easter skies ! 

Our Lord is risen ; 

We too shall rise. 
Nor walls of stone hewn firm and cold, 
Nor Roman soldiers brave and bold, 
Nor Satan's marshalled hosts could keep 
The pierced hands in deathly sleep ; 
Just as the Easter day-beams dawn 
Our buried Lord is risen and gone ! 

Loud Easter bells ! 

Rich Easter bells ! 

A ransomed world 

Your chiming tells. 
Let hills and rocks your gladness peal ! 
Behold the stone and broken seal ! 
Angels in white from heaven's bright way 
The useless clothes together lay, 
Then sit serene at head and feet 
The earliest saints with joy to greet. 

Green Easter fields! 

Fair Easter fields ! 

Heaven's first ripe fruit 

Death conquered yields. 
In churchyards wide the seeds we sow; 
Beneath the Cross the wheat shall grow : 
One Easter Day Death's reign shall end, 
And golden sheaves shall heavenward send. 
Hail the blest morn, by whose glad light 
Angels shall reap the harvest white ! 



94 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Sweet Easter flowers ! 

White Easter flowers ! 

From heaven descend 

Life-giving showers. 
Each plant that bloomed at Eden's birth 
Shall blow again o'er ransomed earth. 
Pluck lilies rare and roses sweet, 
And strew the path of Jesus' feet ; 
Throw fragrant palms before our King, 
And wreathe the crown the saved shall bring! 

O Christian child ! 

O Christian men ! 

Our Victor Lord 

Shall come again. 
Wake we our hearts at His command ; 
Lift we our love to His right hand ; 
With warmest hopes, to Easter skies, 
Stretch we our arms and fix our eyes ; 
Till in the clouds His sign we see, 
And quick and dead shout jubilee ! 



THE GENTLE STRANGER. 
By the Rev. R. W. Lowrie, D.D. 

ALONG Judea's twilight way 
The two communed with bated breath. 
Three days had lapsed, with rayless skies, 
Since Jesus' death. 

The while to sober language given, 
A gentle Stranger draws Him near ; 

But eye was bhnd ; His usual voice, 
Nor heard the ear. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 95 

In accents mild and musical, 

The Stranger, as they walked apace : 

" AVhat converse this that hold ye twain ? 
Why sad of face ? " 

Then answered Cleopas, and said : 

" A Stranger art Thou in the land, 
And knowest not the grievous things 

At present hand ? " 

Then all the Scriptures, as they went, 

Of Moses, and of prophets old, 
In full recital, wondrous plain, 

The Stranger told. 

And now have Emmaus' lamps, like stars. 

Shone softly thro' the even-tide; 
The Stranger hastens ; but they said : 

" With us abide." 

Delaying at their sweet request, 

The Stranger sat Him down at meat ; 

And bread He took, and blessed and brake. 
And gave to eat. 

Their eyes no longer holden were. 
For fell the scales from off the sight ; 

But scarce they knew the Lord, until 
He vanished quite ! 

" Did not our hearts within us burn, 

As never burned our hearts before, 
The while He opened, by the way. 

The Sacred Lore ? " 



And, lo, with steps retraced, they tell 
The wondrous things the Stranger said ; 

And how the Risen Lord was known. 
In breaking bread ! 



96 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE COXVERSIOX OF THE CENTURION. 
(The Day after the Resurrection.) 

By the Rt. Rev. W. E. McLaren, D.D., D.C.L. 

THOU say'st He is arisen? that Nazarene 
Whom they did roughly crown with thorns, whose 
side 
I pierced witli this good spear of mine, alive ? 
By Mars. I marvel at thy word. Go to, 
Thou trembling subject of a vanquished king ! 
Nor mock me with thy story of a death 
That was not death, a tomb that was no tomb ; 
Thy grief to folly hath transformed thy wit 
And made thee babble. ]\Iock me not, O Jew ! 

And yet do I remember all that scene, 

The evening of your Sabbath, when He died. 

A shudder ran through nature, rocks were rent, 

And it is whispered that your temple's veil 

Was cleft in twain, and the black heavens frowned. 

As if one of the immortal gods had died. 

I am a man of blood, these eyes have gazed 
On many a crucifixion of the unjust ; 
These ears have heard their cries of agony ; 
And, truth to say, this heart familiar grown 
With death, has lost the natural tenderness 
Of man. But ne'er saw I a death like His, 
Which made that heart a woman's, soft with flow 
Of sympathetic grief. Give me thine ear, 
For I am burdened with emotions strange. 
Nor can their hidden meaning comprehend. 

My men had raised Him on the painful wood, 
And, as we use, had gambled for His robe; 
When, with a pitiful voice He cried aloud 
To One whom we saw not. " Father," He said, 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 97 

" Forgive them, for they know not what they do ! " 

It struck me to the depths. I could not deem 

This man was worthy of the cruel strokes 

Of Roman hammers on our sharpen'd nails, 

Nor of the deadlier thrust of priestly scorn 

And bitter piercing of Sanhedrim hate. 

What manner of man is this — such was my thought — 

Who answers ribald mockings with a prayer. 

And mingles pardons with His dropping blood ? 

Three hours He hung upon the cross — three hours 
Of sharper agony than tongue can tell, 
Three hours, O Jew, made beautiful with love. 
He pardoned us. He comforted a thief, 
He blessed three women standing close with one 
Whose moan revealed a mother's bleeding heart, 
Pierced with a keener sword than this I wear. 
One day, at Vesta's shrine in Rome, I saw — 
Her veil withdrawn — a virgin-priestess' face, 
Too fair, I thought, for eyes like mine to see ; 
I tell thee, Jew, more beautiful than she 
Was that sad woman wailing at the cross. 
May Vesta soothe her ! 

At the hour of noon 
Thick darkness crept upon Jerusalem 
And rested thickest on Golgotha's height. 
Loud-voiced the sufferer on Ehas called. 
Who came not. With our soldier's wine we sought, 
Lifting a hyssop-stem, to quench his thirst. 
And all the earth seem'd trembling with despair. 
Then Jesus bowed His head and died. O'erwhelmed 
I cried : In truth He was a son of God ! 

What frenzy hath o'ercome thy nation, Jew, 
That they invoke such blood upon their heads — 
The blood of one so innocent, so good.-^ 
Oh, had our Pilate known this godlike man 
As I do seem to know, he ne'er had bid 
My band to do this awful deed. 
7 



98 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Alive ? 
Thou say"st He is alive? His sepulchre 
Untenanted? What means this whisper'd tale 
Of magic sages never dreamed could be ? 
They tell us death is not the end of life, 
And I, though rude in speech, unskilled in thought. 
Have in my simpler way attained the height 
Of their philosophy : for how can man 
Deny the immortal longings of his soul, 
Or deem the arch of life to rest alone 
Upon the column that we see. Beyond — 
'T is thus I argue — stands the other shaft 
Built on the Eternal Rock. But who dare dream 
That they who pass can evermore return ? 

If e'er by favor of the immortal gods 

One perished body were to burst its tomb, 

I could imagine this strong Son of God, 

This king of thine, might win the awful boon, — 

He was so noble ! on His brow was set 

The signet of a soul so unearthly pure ! 

If my unwilling spear, obedient 

To stern command of law, pierc'd my own side 

With sharper pang than his, if in the gloom 

Of the sixth hour I curs'd my fate that I, 

A sinful man, could not this hero save, 

I think the Pitiful Ones who dwell above 

Would bend to listen to His dying cry 

And by some portent justify His prayer. 

Yea. if, indignant grown, the onlooking powers 

Should give him back what Hebrew mahce took, 

And if the " Father " God, on whom He called. 

Should bid corruption's worm to touch Him not, 

I could believe it — will believe it true. 

Perchance, — is 't not a thought, O Jew, to thrill 

Our souls? — perchance this man was more than man, 

A god come down to show some better way 

For men to live that live, for men that die 

To die, — a god more strong than life, than death, 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 99 

Than the all-conquering grave. Perchance 

This messenger of better things shall speak 

When Pan is dead and Jupiter himself 

Shall lose his grasp on thunderbolts of wrath ; 

'T is said our oracles grow dumb ; and I 

Have heard prophetic whispers, speeding far 

O'er all the empire, that a new age comes — 

Another chapter in Time's fateful book. 

It may be true. Nay, by my heart's strange leap, 

I cannot choose but hail the better day, 

Brought nigh by Him who died and rose again. 

Lead me, O Jew, where I may worship Him — 
Brother of mine, oh, lead me to the spot 
Where we may learn more of that Father-love, 
Of holy pardon and the immortal life, 
Of death that is not death, of graves where we 
Shall only sleep a little while ! 

No more 
Relentless Mars, spear-armed, dare I invoke — 
Before the Conqueror of Death I bow ! 



lOO LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 



THE ASCENSION. 
By the Rev. C. W. Leffingwell, D.D. 

LIFT up your heads, O gates ! Be lifted high, 
Ye everlasting portals of the sky ! 
The King, in glorious majesty draws nigh ! 

He comes with power, who lived on earth unknown, 
Despised by men. rejected by His own ; 
He comes, a King, victorious to His throne. 

The Lord ascends ! His work on earth is done; 
The Lord ascends ! His reign in Heaven begun, — 
His people ransomed and His kingdom won. 

Sing, O ye heavens ! Be joyful all ye lands ! 
O all ye people, shout, and clap your hands ! 
High over all the King of Glory stands ! 

Who is the King of glory? Even He, 

The Lord of Hosts, who evermore shall be ! — 

The risen Lord, who ruleth land and sea ! 

O earth, rejoice ! Ye isles thereof, be glad ! 
O suffering world, so long oppressed and sad, 
Behold your King, in strength and beauty clad ! 

Behold your King, though passed from human sight, 
By faith behold Him, — where in regal might, 
He comes, a conqueror, to His throne of hght ! 

Lift up your heads, O gates ! Wide open swing, 
Ye doors of Heaven ! While men and angels sing 
A loud hosanna to the glorious King ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. lOI 

THE ASCENSION. 
By W. B. Chisholm. 

TO rise, O Lord, with Thee, — 
To leave low earth, its sorrows and its joys, 
Wearied with toilsome sport, with fleeting toys. 
Fain to ascend where angel's harp employs 
Its sweetest note to sing Thy glorious praise, 
Behold, O Lord, worn with these dusty ways, 
I would ascend with Thee ! 

But I must grovel here, yet see Thee go ; 
Yearn, with fast-dimming gaze, as up the track 
Of yonder sky Thy bright ascension shows 
To my sad feet their feebleness, — no wings. 
Naught, naught but grief and vexedness, below, — 
Yet hear the gentle mandate hastening back, 
All fraught with soul-reviving cheer, 

" Press on ! 
The path of pain and toil is still the way ; 
Bide on the heavenly promise, — breaks the day." 

But, Lord, I weary grow ! 
I see bright-vested angels girt to wait 
Around Thy kingly feast, still hard and late 
I toil for grace. Yet passion charms to sin ; 
And sin to death will drag. Can I not go ? 
Is this Thy will, — this lonely walk below? 



"Yes, restless heart, believe thou, — but believe 
When I am ready thou shalt hear thy call. 
Keep faithful fast ! Anon the festival 
Shall peal its bells for thee. Nor grieve 
That e'en the friend thou lov'st most dear must go 
Before thy soul's release ; abide below 
All dutiful and murmurless. Ere long 
My voice shall bid thee join the holy throng ! " 



R 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 103 

WHITSUNTIDE LILIES. 

By N. M. Hitchcock. 

ING out your dainty bells, ye lilies of the valley 



With loveliness most fit adorn the font, the altar. 
The holy place ! 

Ring out your tender bells, ye quivering, wind-blown lilies. 

While we rejoice 
In Him who comes ahke in rushing wind and mighty. 

And still small voice ! 

Ring out your bells so pure, ye fair, ye snowy lihes ! 

The Holy Dove, 
To make our hearts as white and to present us spotless, 

Comes from above. 

Ring out your chalice-bells, ye incense-wafting lilies ! 

Your perfumed breath 
Shall tell of offering pure from hearts the Spirit's pleading 

Has waked from death. 

Rmg out your blessed bells, ye Pentecostal lilies \ 

The Paraclete, 
The Comforter is come ! Oh, be our hearts his dwelling, 

His temple meet. 



I04 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THANKSGIVING HYMN. 
By the Rev. Tohx Anketell. 



G 



OD of our fathers, enthroned through all ages. 
Ever in mercy and kindness revealed. 
Guard us in peace : and when war's tumult rages 
Be Thou our helmet, our sword, and our shield. 

Through the long years Thou hast granted us blessing. 

Filling our homes with the light of Thy grace : 
Let us as children, Thy love still possessing, 

Ever rejoice in the smile of Thy face. 

When the fierce tempest around us is raving. 
Let the wild storm be restrained by Thy will, — 

As on the lake, where the white crests were waving 
0"er the rough billows, Thy voice cried, '• Be still ! " 

Crown our broad prairies with sheaves rich and golden, 
Fill all our dwellings with plenty and health ; 

Let our fair children, as in the days olden, 

Find in Thy blessing their joy and their wealth. 

Still with Thy wisdom our senators guiding. 

Grant to our warriors a heart brave and true : 
0"er the wide ocean let proud navies riding 

Show to the nations our Red. White, and Blue. 

Guard well our L'nion unmoved and unshaken ; 

Love be the bond that shall bind us as one. 
Safe is our trust, by Thine arm unforsaken; 

Shine on us ever. Eternity's Sun. 

God of our fathers, enthroned through all ages, 
Low at Thy footstool our homage we yield ; 

Guard us in peace : and when fierce battle rages 
Be Thou our helmet, our sword, and our shield. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 105 

ALL SAINTS' DAY. 
By Katherine A. Matthew. 

OUR year wanes fast ; and the rain-drops fall, 
As though Nature were tired and grieving ; 
The pale sun shines through a golden mist 
On the scenes it will soon be leaving. 

Our hearts beat slowly, life's pulses chill, 
Looking back on the year departed, — 

The year that we met in its Easter joy. 
Faithful and happy-hearted. 

Now slowly and solemnly over our heads 

The All-Saints' bells are swinging ; 
And our hands are folded for purer prayer 

While the heavenward chime is ringing. 

Into her wide, kind, loving arms, 

The Church our Mother, enfolding, 
Comforting, bids us lift our eyes, 

New life, new joys, beholding. 

Her year wanes too *, and her message sweet 

Lies soft on our hearts' complaining. 
Like the gentle grace of the summer glow 

On the fair, clear sky remaining. 

" Let the dead past be dead ! " she breathes, 

" Child of my love unfailing. 
Look on to the light of the Advent morn ! 

Faith is not unavaihng." 

*' Ah ! but our souls are stained with sin 

For which there is no forgiving, — 
Promises broken, neglected vows, 

And life's unworthiest livinof." 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 107 

" For ye, tired children, sorrowful ones, 
The message is ever given, — 
Pardon and Love again and again 
Till your sins' last chain is riven. 

" Pray — for the Master will come full soon ; 

Watch — for his reappearing ; 
Trust — for His word is ever true ; 

Hope — for the skies are clearing. 

" Into the glorious Advent light, 
Solemn and steadfast shining, 
Lift up your hearts, — be strong, be true, 
Work, love, trust, unrepining ; 

" For the saints, whose glorious hves ye read, 
Sinned too, and were God-forgiven, — 

Finished their work and kept the faith ; 
And for them the rest of Heaven." 



ALL SAINTS' DAY. 
By the Rev. M. Lindsay Kellner. 

FOR all Thy Saints in Paradise, the bless'd. 
Whose footsteps once these pilgrim pathways pressed. 
Who have attained to Thy dear land of rest. 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 

For Thine Apostles, guileless, eager, bold. 
Who truly shepherded their Master's fold ^ 
For Martyrs dying for the crown foretold. 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 

For Thine Evangelists, with heavenly might, 
By Holy Ghost inspired the Word to write. 
Mid earth's dark skies the one, the hallowed Light, 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 



Io8 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

For God-sent Priests, who taught their fellow-men 
To love Thy precepts, from their sins refrain, 
And turned their wayward steps to Thee again, 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 

For saintly Fathers, who have crossed the flood, 
And left these weary ways which once they trod, 
Whose souls undying now are with their God, 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 

For gentle Mothers, home divinely led, 
Whose angel-faces smiling bend to shed 
A benediction on their children's head, 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 

For these, a glorious band forever bless'd. 
The Church triumphant, Church with Thee at rest, 
Forever through the ages be addressed 
Alleluia ! Lord, to Thee. 



WITHIN THE VEIL. 

By N. M. Hitchcock. 

WHEN the autumn's glowing splendor 
Softens in the haze so tender 
Of the Indian-summer skies, 
Then my soul, her eyes upraising. 
Through the veil would fain be gazing 
On the hills of Paradise. 

For the Church now tells the story 
Of the blessed ones in glory, 

Tasting joys that never fail ; 
Of the multitude unnumbered. 
Who, no more by cares encumbered. 

Dwell with Christ within the veil. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 109 

Purple tints are softly gleaming 
On the hills ; and, to my seeming, 

At this holy All-Saints' tide. 
Through the mists come faintly swelling 
Strains of sweetest music, telling 
How the saints in glory dwelling 

Join to praise the Crucified. 

Earth grows dim and Heaven seems nearer; 
To faith's vision grows yet clearer 

The bright fields of Paradise, 
Where is blessedness supernal. 
Where are pastures ever vernal, 
Where the flowers bloom eternal. 

And the streams immortal rise. 

Nor shall fade the vision glorious. 
Till o'er sin and hell victorious, 

Christ shall all things good perfect ; 
Ours the hope of blessed union. 
Ours the mystical communion. 

With the hosts of God's elect. 

Thus may we, in faith abiding. 
Follow the Good Shepherd's guiding, 

Falter not, though hosts assail ; 
Till, the palms of victory bearing, 
Amaranthine garlands wearing, 
Our Redeemer's victory sharing, 

We shall dwell within the veil. 




AGNUS DEI. 
By Isabel G. Eaton. 



o 



LAMB of God! 
With sins bowed down, I cr}- ! 
The woes that mortals bear till day of doom, 
The web of grief woven in life's weird loom, 
Like shadows swiftly fly 
When Jesus passeth by. 

O Lamb of God ! 
Before Thine altar fair 
The prayers of saints, hke incense, ever soar. 
The Eternal Son, in love forevermore 
Veils His bright glor}- there. 
And bends our griefs to share. 

O Lamb of God ! 
For us the Feast is spread. 
Not all in vain Thy bitter cross and woe 
When from it wells of living water flow ; 
The wine glows ruby red, 
And thus Thy blood was shed. 

O Lamb of God ! 
Who tak'st our sins away ! 
Thy mercy show to souls all penitent 
Who seek Thee in this Blessed Sacrament. 
Thou Sun of perfect day ! 
Shine on our toilsome wav! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 

O Lamb of God I 
The soul no pain may bear 
Who finds Thee in the Church's sacred feast, 
For at Thy Word the waves' wild tumult ceased, 
And peace fell like a prayer. 
Shall we Thy sorrows share, 
O Lamb of God ? 



HOLY COMMUXIOX HYMX. 
By John C. Garrett. 

DEAR Jesus, full of tender grace. 
In homage low we kneel. 
To ghmpse the brightness of Thy face. 
Which outward signs reveal. 

Faith proves Thee present. Lord Divine : 

By faith then to us come ; 
Conveyed by creatures — bread and wine — 

I\Iake in our hearts Thy home. 

The broken Body we receive. 

We drink Thy Life's pure flow : 
Now cleanse us from the guilt we giieve, 

In peace then bid us go. 

Shadows, we know, must now divide. 

Between our sight and Thee ; 
Yet, through them, we approach Thy side. 

And prove Thy grace so free. 

Dear Saviour, Jesus, Holy Guest, 

To us now deign to come ; 
In our poor hearts shed peace, give rest — 

Sweet antepast of Home. 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Yea, Lord, "in this sweet morning hoar" 

Thyself to us impart; 
Thee to receive, bestow the power, 

And fill our empty heart. 



EARLY COMMUNION. 
By O. W. Rogers. 

AT day's sweet prime I seek the fane. 
Lord, where Thine honor dwells. 
The sunshine through the painted pane 

A glorious day foretells ; 
And lights upon the altar shine 
As heralds of Thy grace divine. 

Peace welcomes me. I leave behind 
The world and worldly ways ; 

With childlike and receptive mind 
I come to pray and praise, — 

To see Thee "lifted up," O Lord, 

By faithful souls to be adored. 

I lay upon Thine altar fair, 

As offering, my heart ; 
My sins I plead : they many are ; 

Their pardon, Lord, impart. 
And so refresh me with Thy grace 
That I may better run life's race. 

For those in Paradise I plead, 

Who in the flesh were dear ; 
For loved ones absent intercede. 

As they were kneeling here. 
O sweetest Feast ! Communion blest, 

'Tis here we meet and in Thee rest. 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 113 

O make us all partakers, Lord, 

Of Thy dear Self to be ; 
Our hearts engraven with Thy Word, 

Our lives Thy ministry, 
And ever thankful for Thy love, 
So freely given us to prove. 

The priest bestows the sign of grace. 

The Benedicite, 
While silence fills the holy place 

Where God is wont to be, 
And then my pilgrim path I take 
Ere yet the world is quite awake. 



OUR LORD IN THE BLESSED SACRAMENT. 
By Marion Couthouy Smith. 

HE came in the morning, sweet and still 
As the first sun-ray on some lonely hill ; 
From the splendor of heaven, from the awful throne, 
Veiled and silent, He came alone. 

And the few glad hearts that looked for Him, 
In the pure, soft hush of the morning dim. 
Had raised Him an altar, and made it bright 
With the loveliest gifts, — with flowers and light. 

But because He came in such lowhness. 
How many souls whom He willed to bless 
Looked out beyond Him, and would not own 
Their very King on so poor a throne ! 

The angels owned Him, an unseen throng; 
But the silence stirred not with cry or song: 
The great world slumbered, and none drew near 
But the few to whom He was more than dear, — 
8 



114 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

The few from whose eyes no veil could hide 
The Being of Him once crucified ; 
And into their heart of hearts He came, 
And met and mingled as flame with flame. 

But some — oh, wonder ! — could touch Him so 
With soul and body, and 7iever know, 
Nor think, nor care how His wondrous Love 
Drew Him with yearning from heights above. 

Daily it draws Him, — so still, so sweet ! 

Though few should own Him, though none should greet, 

With us forever He wills to stay ; 

JesH, Rex glo?'ics, ado7'o Te / 



THE HOLY EUCHARIST. 
By the Rev. F. S. Jewell, Ph.D. 

THE holy ground on which we reverent tread 
With shrinking foot-fall and unsandalled feet 

The mystic shrine within whose vale we meet 
The wondrous presence of our gracious Head : 
The altar at whose blood-stained base we bend 

With grateful alms and holy praise and prayer ; 

The Table in whose feast we thankful share; 
The riches which the Master's grace attend, — 

All these, with light and life and love, are thine : 

O Sacrament of Sacrifice divine ! 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. II5 

EUCHARISTIC HYMN. 
By Wm. E. Snowden. 

PAN IS mundi date mundo 
Immundis hominibus, 
Nos coelesti Cibo Tuo, 
Pastor, Panis, pasce nos, 

Vinum animae perdignum, 

Agne Dei, Domine, 
Ferens plagas supra Lignum, 

Ligno latus, nos audi. 

Panis fracte supra Lignum, 

Panis Tu ex Arbore, 
Opem fer iis qui dignum 

Coena veniunt frui. 

Sanguis fuse supra Lignum, 

Agne pro nobis Dei, 
Castos fac eos qui dignum 

Coena veniunt frui. 

Sanguis sacer sacrae Vitis, 

Quo rei queunt lui, 
Veniam da his contritis 

Coena qui eunt frui. 

Sacra Vitis, Vinum sacrum 

Vitam nostro corpori 
Animaeque ferto Tuam, 

Coena quum imus frui. 

Panis mundi, Vitis, Vinum, 

Pastor, Pastus, nos imple 
Te Ipso. Da nobis plenum 

Donum Tui, Domine. 



Il6 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE BREAD OF LIFE. 
By Jennie Marsh Parker. 



D' 



^EAR Lord, and can it be 
That Thou hast bidden me 
To break my fast, my hungry soul to fill, 
With that blest company 
In heaven's purity, — 
The host of angels, loyal to Thy will ? 

I know it is not meet 
That one whose sinful feet 
Are ever prone to choose the evil way, 
Should come Thy courts within 
From where these feet have been. 
" Come unto me," Thou sayest : I obey. 

And, dear Lord, as I come 

Let all of earth be dumb, 
That my vexed soul Thy temple calm may be, 

And yearning to be fed 

Of Thee, the living Bread, — 
A sweet foretaste of heaven and of Thee. 

O blessed company, 

Enwrapt in ecstasy, 
What place have I where angel's food is given ? 

" Lift up your hearts," he saith ; 

" Nor hunger unto death, — 
One Bread I break for all of earth and heaven." 



THE CHRISTIAN YEAR. 



EUCHARISTIC LIVES. 

By the Rev. J. Heber McCandless. 
(Gospel for the Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity.) 

DISTRESS unites and moves the ten to pray 
And lift their voices to the Lord ; 
Relief divides, and scatters each his way, 
Unmindful of a thankful word ; 
While wounded Love, in sad and wondering tone, 
In reverie, as though alone, 
Beholding only one who kneeled, 
Speaks to ungrateful hearts, " Were not ten healed.'' 

A stranger to God's Church and lawful Priest 

Comes near to Christ, and with loud voice 

Gives praise and thanks ; for he at least 

In light will gratefully rejoice. 

All healed, in Eucharistic song he lays 

At Jesus' feet his praise. 

Adoring lowly Him who blest 

And filled in love his soul with deepest rest. 

O loving Christ, what mercies day by day 

Poured from Thy hands around us fall ! 

But where are hearts that in thanksgiving pray? 

Dost come to Thee one tenth of all ? 

Our souls hft up a moaning voice in prayer, — 

" Kyrie Eleison ! Spare ! " 

Love hears ; and gracious voices come. 

Eucharistic then our lives } or are they dumb? 

O souls, absolved by Christ's most gracious word, 
Made pure and clean, and filled with gladness. 
When at the font and altar prayer He heard, 
Seek Him, and keep His heart from sadness ! 
Seek Eucharist, and keep His love, 
And live with Him above ! 
And at the altar, with most thankful heart, 
Draw near, where nine from ten depart. 




^ocm^ of Consolation. 



THERE WAS NO MORE SEA.' 



By Thomas Mair. 



BRIGHT on the dark, retreating clouds, 
Through drops that sparkle in the sunlight's glow, 
Spanning the east, we view displayed 

In calm, pure beauty, God's majestic bow. 

The angry waves that lately broke 

High in the cliff, with loud, continuous roar. 

Breathe out their lives in one last sob, 

And silence reigns along the peaceful shore. 

Low in the sky, the setting sun 

Fills all the scene, e'er yet his glories pass, 
Till, mirrored in the flood, we see 

The heavenly vision of the sea of glass. 



J.20 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

We gaze beyond the glowing light 

Deep in the west, where sky and ocean meet. 

And see, like him in Patmos isle, 

The pearly entrance and the golden street. 

The forms of those we long since lost 
Bright with celestial glory then appear, 

Each face reflecting perfect joy, 

For God has wiped away the mourner's tear. 

We kneel upon the fading shore 

And stretch our eager hands to that dear home, 
Where, safe within God's Paradise, 

We dread no more earth's storm nor billow's foam. 

One trembling step, but He will guide 

Whose voice once bade the waves their raging cease, 
And far above the spreading tide 

We enter God's eternal home of peace. 



1 



INDIAN SUMMER. 
By Laura H. Feuling. 



■^HE rainbow lights are on the woods, 



And all the hills infold. 
And, far away, the solitudes 

Are lit with rays of gold, 
The yellow leaves come drifting down, 

Soft as a cradle rhyme ; 
And so it was ere she was gone, 

Last year, this time ! 

The fields are gay with golden-rod. 
The sumach burns like flame : 

And there the wild white asters nod. 
The very, very same. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 12I 

A truant bird on yonder bough 

Calls like a matin chime ; 
'T was singing then as blithe as now — 

Last year, this time ! 

No strange bloom on the year is set, 

Unlike the beauty flown ; 
And so I know He '11 not forget 

To give us back our own. 
He gives the violet its blue, 

The year its sunlit prime ; 
lie '11 keep for us the face we knew 

Last year, this time ! 



"SOMEBODY." 
By May Kidder. 



SOMEBODY hfted her curly head 
To her dear mamma's kind face, and said 
" You say that for me His blood was shed 
On the cross for my salvation ! " 

Somebody knelt, with veiled head bent, 
As the bishop came, the messenger sent 
To give to souls the sacrament 
Of Holy Confirmation. 



Somebody lifted her sweet young face 
To that of the priest, as he tried to trace 
In her tear-dimmed eyes, the blessed grace 
And strength of consolation. 

Somebody knelt at the altar-rail, 
With sad, calm face, so thin and pale, 
And a look so holy, and yet so frail, 
To take the Cup of Salvation. 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Somebody lay in her last repose, 
In her dear, dead hand a half-blown rose, 
And the voices were sad and low of those 
Who were left in desolation. 

Somebody lies in the churchyard by, 
And over her bends the clear, blue sky. 
As the old bells seem to ring out the cry : 
•' I am the Resurrection ! "' 



SURSUM CORDA! 
By M. E. Beauchamp (Filia Ecclesiae). 

OSOUL, that hast a right to higher life. 
Why be content with this poor mundane sphere ? 
Forgetful of thy lofty heritage, 

Why should thy fears and wishes centre here ? 

Rise up, O heart, above this dark, cold sod, 

Rise into warmer air and purer light, 
And see the petty joys and cares of earth 

Dwindle and vanish from thy soaring sight ! 

In thy brief absence from our Father's courts, 

Wilt thou forget thy lineage divine 1 
And more esteem the exile's mean array 

Than all the treasures that are truly thine 1 

Why should we love, and strive to make like home, 
This one-night lodging in a basement cell ? 

When the whole palace overhead is ours, 
And in its stately chambers we shall dwell. 

Lift up your hearts! Too long have we bestowed 
On this poor earth our being's noblest powers. 

Lift up your hearts ! lift them to His abode. 
His who alone can fill these hearts of ours ! 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 123 

THE DOVE THAT RETURNED NO MORE. 
By E. S. 

WHEN o'er the plain one dreary waste of water 
Dashed its fierce spray above the forest tree, 
How sweet the refuge, and how blest the shelter. 
Oh, weary dove, the ark held forth to thee ! 

But oh ! the days of weary, sickening longing 
For air and sunshine, on thy flight to soar; 

The thrill of rapture when, thy pinions spreading, 
Thou couldst fly forth in the glad Spring once more. 

Alas ! not yet thy captive days are over, 
Not yet thy home is in the mountain pine ; 

Back to thy refuge once again returning, 
Fold thy sad wing, and hope again resign. 

It may not be, — again the eager flutter, 

The throbbing heart, the eye that begs release, — 

Fly forth, dear bird, and bring, when evening closes, 
The leaf that tells of pardon and of peace. 

Fly forth again, upon thy way rejoicing. 

In God's own sunshine, at thy pleasure soar; 

The flood has ceased, the rainbow smiles triumphant, 
The dove, set free at length, returns no more ! 

O weary soul ! O longing heart ! a shelter 
Beneath God's altar thou art blest to find ; 

Canst thou not rest, in peace and safety dweUing, 
And all thy longings and thy quests resign .-* 

It cannot be ; the spirit's deathless craving. 

Nor rest, nor peace, alone can satisfy ; 
It must have freedom, storm and darkness braving, 

God gave the wing, 't is He that bids it fly. 



124 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

In vain, again, and yet again, returning. 

It finds that earth for it has but one Home — 
Yet from its flight one leaf of promise bringing, 

A moment's glimpse of happier days to come. 

And they shall come, — the eager pinion, stretching 
In God's own sunshine, shall exult and soar: 

Bursting the limits of its earthly prison 
The soul, set free at last, returns no more ! 



TIRED. 
By Gertrude E. Heath. 

DEAR Brother. I am tired : take my hand 
And lead me safely to thy Fatherland. 
The path is stern and rough, my weary feet 
Are torn and hot. O Brother, sweet. 
Canst Thou not comfort me ? I am so worn. 
Thou dost not know the pain that I have borne. 
Thou dost not know how oft I have sunk down 
Beneath my heavy cross — how far the crowm 
Has seemed ; and I have thought, O Brother, sweet. 
There was no crown for me. My tired feet 
Refused to move. And yet by some strange power 
I have gained needed strength until this hour. 

But now I am so tired ! I cannot rise. 
Oh, bear me safely on to sunnier skies ! 
The w^ay is dark, so dark I cannot see 
One step before my feet, — oh, pity me ! 

I tried to rise ; alas ! I cannot move ! 
O Brother, raise me up by Thy dear love ! 
My dress is soiled and torn, its beauty gone — 
Too poor for one like Thee to look upon. 



POEMS GF CONSOLATION. 12 

I know I have been wrong, and lost my way. 

Take, take my hand ! No more from Thee I '11 stray. 

Dear Brother ! Oh, how kind to seek me out ! 
I should have perished quite, Thy care without. 
Dear Saviour, take my hand ! Hold, hold it tight! 
Close-folded in Thine own, oh, happy night ! 
No more to walk alone, but close to Thee, — 
White hands, and robe, and heart. Thy gift to me. 

Ah ! this is worth it all, — the thorny way. 

The darkness, grief, and pain, each shadowed day. 

For now I know that He, my Brother, sweet, 

Walked with me all the way ; and when my feet 

Refused their task, 't was He that raised me up. 

'Twas he, my Brother dear, who filled each cup 

That was my daily drink ; and it is He 

Whose hand is folding mine — who leadeth me ! 



MARY'S BIRTHDAY. 
By p. 

5'T^ IS your birthday, my precious, my darling, 

-L Or would be if you were on earth ; 
I think it must still be your birthday, 

Though born to your heavenly birth. 
The angels, I know, are as sweet 

As these lovely white roses I twine ; 
Their love may be pure and complete. 

But never more tender than mine. 
Are you glad in their gladness, my darling } 

Do you laugh in their innocent glee ? 
Or are you lonely in Paradise, 

Waiting and wishing for me 1 



126 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

As I stand now and look at your picture. 

And drop on the roses my tears, 
As I pray for the touch of your fingers 

To comfort my sorrows and fears ; 
So light is the veil that 's between us, 

To the mother the child is so near, 
The breath of my soul is suspended 

For your accents so tender and clear. 

my glorified darling, most precious, 
The one gift I thought was all mine ! 

1 have lent you, not lost you, my darling. 
Only lent to the Love that 's divine. 

There are moments so sweet and so solemn 

That my soul bursts its prison of pain, 
And soars to the realm of the spirit. 

And meets my own darling again. 
Then, calm from that saintly communion, 

I defy every foe of the world ; 
I scorn every breath of contumely. 

Every shaft by its ignorance hurled. 
Why these black robes of grief and of mourning 

Do I wear for a spirit like thee. 
When my heart should be filled with thanksgiving 

That my child from sorrow is free } 



ALONE. 

By the Rev. Nelson Ayres. 

I SLEPT, and dreamed a dream of light ; 
I seemed to pass the ocean's foam. 
To greet the southern sunshine bright. 
The sparkling waters, land bedight 

With tropic blossoms ; now I roam 
No more ; but happy plight ! 

Embrace my children and my wife at home. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 127 

Oh, happy dream ! Oh, vision rare ! 

This longing tension of my heart 
Was gone. I sat all free from care, 
And gazed upon that face so fair, 

That thrills my soul's most secret part, 
And said, No fate shall tear 

Ever again our throbbing hearts apart. 

I woke. The night was dark and cold. 

The chilly rain with sullen sound 
Was pouring down. The thunder rolled 
In hollow peals. A dread untold 

My heart in chains of sadness bound. 
Alone, and unconsoled 

By light, and home, and love, myself I found. 

Alas ! how oft in waking hours 

We dream such dreams of love and joy; 

Enraptured walk enchanted bowers ; 

Taste of love's fruits, and pluck her flowers ! 
All happy bliss without alloy. 

All peace and rest are ours ; 

Nor heavy cares, nor shaking fears annoy. 

But soon the harsher things of life 

Arouse us from the vision blest; 
Its daily cares, its sordid strife, 
Fierce jealousies, and rumors rife, 

Bring to the spirit deep unrest. 
Alone and sad is life. 

By darkling storm and solitude opprest. 

Alone must every spirit fare. 

E'en through the full world's crowded ways ; 
Yet not alone ! For even there, 
In stormiest night of trouble, prayer 

Will find a God, who ever stays. 
With never-failing care, 

On His eternal staff, the soul that prays. 



128 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

His love a shelter sure provides ; 

He hears the sorrowing sufferer's moan ; 
Beneath His wings' broad shadow hides 
The storm-beat soul ; and gently guides 

To Him the lone and wandering one. 
Whatever ill betides, 

Who rests on God is never left alone. 



HE GIVETH SXOW LIKE WOOL." 
By I. W. P. 



w 



HEN nature's biting northern blast 
Hath sealed the rills of water fast, 
And all seem on God's mercies cast, 
" He giveth snow like wool." 

When all around is bleak and drear, 
And some grow faint, and many fear, 
As winter's sterile form draws near, 
" He giveth snow like wool." 

When precious seeds in furrows lie, 
To human seeming like to die, 
As the dread north wind passeth by, 
•■ He giveth snow like wool.'' 

To clothe anew earth's naked form, 
W^ith mantle pure and fresh and warm, 
And screen it from the raging storm, 
'' He giveth snow like wool." 

To symbolize the pure and true. 
And show a nature rendered new, — 
Which naught but heavenly grace can do, 
" He giveth snow Hke wool.'' 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 129 

THE SOUL'S LESSON. 
By Mrs. J. D. H. Browne. 

SO hard, so hard to learn ! 
It has taken years upon years ; 
For the teaching seemed hard and stern, 
And she could not see for tears. 

So hard, so hard to learn ! 

She longed for the lighter task ; 
The poor weak heart would yearn. 

And the faltering lips would ask. 

Ah, foolish heart, to seek 

For a smoother, easier road ! 
A way is made for the meek 

That will lead them straight to God. 

So hard, so hard to learn ! 

For the soul's eyes were too dim 
With looking down, to discern 

That the rough ways lead to Him. 

Laden with love and care, — 

Poor earthly care and love, — 
Life had no room for the prayer 

That lifts to the peace above. 

So hard, so hard to learn ! 

By grief was the lesson taught, 
Ere the thirsty soul could turn 

To the stream that faileth not, — 

Ere the blinded soul could grope 

Towards the Light that can never fade, 

Could taste of the deathless hope, 
Of the rest that Our Lord has made. 
9 



130 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

So hard, so hard to learn ! 

And yet when learned how sweet 
From earth and its griefs to turn, 

And lie at the Master's feet. 



CHEER UP, FAINT HEART! 

By Mrs. Jane M. Mead. 

CHEER up, faint heart ! 
Plans never fail that are of God's designing. 
Weep not for glad days gone ; 
No mourning garb put on ; 
Though storms roar loud, behind the cloud 
The same bright sun is ever, ever shining. 

Cheer up, faint heart ! 

Be brave, be brave ; yield not to doubt nor sorrow. 
Hope's star may seem to set. 
And friends grow cold ; but yet — 

Be strong, be strong ! Life is not long 

The night is short; the sun will rise to-morrow. 

Cheer up, faint heart ! 

Fear not the foe ; the war will soon be over. 

Trust thou thy Leader's skill 

To rescue thee; He will. 
O'er God's true child Heaven's wardens mild 
Keep constant guard, and angel pinions hover. 

Cheer up, faint heart ! 

Thy greatest fear needs be the fear of sinning. 

Adversity may come. 

And grief's keen darts strike home. 
But trust Him still thy cup to fill 
With joy, who knows the end from the beginning. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 131 

A YEAR IN PARADISE. 

By the Rev. Joseph Cross, D.D., LL.D. 

ni'^HE saddest days of all the year 
J- My saddest thoughts renew, 
When Autumn winds with foliage sere 

The mount and meadow strew, 
And midnight clouds are dark and drear, 

And stars are faint and few. 

A year to-night since, far away, 

I paced the silent room, 
And wailed the cold, impassive clay 

Apparelled for the tomb. 
More mindful of its dark decay 

Than its reviving bloom. 

But, oh ! while oft, with aching eyes, 

I nightly vigils kept, 
Why did not faith's strong pinions rise 

To where the saint I wept, 
Secure from pain, in Paradi'se, 

On Jesu's bosom slept? 

A year in Paradise ! — How strange ! 

What note is there of time, 
What seasons of successive change, 

What tower's melodious chime, 
What measure of the spirit's range. 

What bound to thought sublime? 

A year in Paradise ! — Rele^ed 

With victor's lute and palm, 
A guest at God's eternal feast 

To swell the holy psalm, 
The tempest of the passions ceased 

In love's celestial calm. 



132 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH, 

A year in Paradise ! — How blest 

Is thy condition now ! 
New-born, by elder saints caressed, 

With bloom-encircled brow ; 
While I, an exile sore distressed, 

Beneath my burden bow. 

A year in Paradise ! — No tears 
In that fair land are known ; 

No gloomy doubts nor ghastly fears 
Their baleful seeds have sown : 

No broken hearts through blighted years 
Sustain their griefs alone. 

A year in Paradise I — Serene 

In fellowship made sure, 
With spirits robed in goodly sheen, 

And fruit of faith mature, 
Mid fields of never-fading green 

And living waters pure. 

A year in Paradise ! — Ah me ! 

Who linger yet below. 
Through weary days to weep for thee, 

And nights of deeper woe. 
Till death shall set the captive free 

And bid me rise and go ! 

A year in Paradise ! — But why 

Lament the dead that live 
Where He who lives no more to die 

Will life eternal give. 
And all who on His word rely 

The boon divine receive ? 

A year in Paradise ! — And soon 

My spirit thine may trace, 
Perchance before another moon. 

To meet thee face to face, 
And bask in love's immortal noon 

With all the heirs of o:race. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 133 

A year in Paradise ! — How sweet 

That precious hope to me ! 
Before the Saviour's throne to greet 

My other self in thee, 
And bow to kiss the nail-pierced feet 

And bless the cursed tree ! 

A year in Paradise ! — Oh, rest 

Till that last gift be given ; 
Till Christ return — the King confessed, 

And charnel houses riven 
Shall roll their chant from east to west, 

And Paradise be Heaven ! 



T 



BEYOND. 

i 

By Erastus C. Delavan. 

WO weary feet, 

Grown tired upon earth's thorny road, 

Have entered in 
The peaceful paradise of God. 



Two loving eyes 

That looked her boy's heart through and through, 

And sweetly shared 
His burdens, that the mother knew. , 

Two willing hands 

Are folded now, their work well done ; 

The way was long, 
And sweet the setting of life's sun. 

An angel face 

From which the clouds of earth have fled — 

A radiant face ! 
On which the Saviour's love is shed. 



134 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Why should we mourn ? 

The way was long, the rest was sweet, 

And ere she went 
She w'alked with God with willing feet. 

Oh ! sainted one, 

Beneath our cross we struggle on, 

And hail the day 
That joins wife, father, sister, son. 



SHALL I NOT SEE THEM WAITIxNG 
STAND ? " 

By Mrs. J. H. Meech. 

LIFE'S greenest spots were quickly past, 
Life's brightest stars are sinking fast, 
Yet have I you, and heaven, at last, 
Dear friends, whose feet have gone before 
To wait upon the eternal shore 
For one with whom you walked of yore. 

Between me and eternity 
Life's darkest shadows seem to lie, 
Like clouds against a summer's sky ; 
Swiftly I near the eternal strand : 
Soon shall I reach the immortal land 
There to rejoin my household band. 

dwellers in God's Paradise, 
Looking on me with love-lit eyes 

Out from your home beyond the skies ! 

1 see your hands stretched forth to me ; 
Across the vast eternal sea 

Your voices call incessantly. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 135 

Separate from me, on holier shore, 
Your feet are set ; tho' severed far, 
Still in my heart I hold you more 
Than all the loves of outlived years. 
Above the din of earthly cares, 
Thro' all the mist of blinding tears 
I see your white hands beckon me; 
Across the vast, eternal sea 
Your voices call incessantly. 



AT REST. 
By Frances A. Shaw. 

NOW God be praised she in His peace reposes, — 
This gray-haired saint from all earth's woes at rest. 
In the clasped hands, her emblems, June's sweet roses. 
Its pure white lilies on her purer breast ' 

Tried, patient one ! faithful to every duty, 
Careful and anxious about many things, 
Yet ever mindful that life's highest beauty 
Lies in the service of the King of kings 

The hand of Martha and the heart of Mary 

In thee found union mystical and sweet ; 

Given to " much serving," ne'er of good works weary, 

Thy chosen place was still at Jesus' feet. 

O soul, that soared on ever joyous pinions, 
With David's psalm, with Miriam's song of praise. 
That found its home in Art's serene dominions, 
Yet never scorned the lowhest household ways ! 

O spirit chastened in the school of anguish. 
Doomed from hfe's earliest to its latest breath 
To see hopes perish, fairest home-flowers languish, 
And yield at last to the grim reaper Death ! 



136 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

O Niobe, ever loved and lost ones weeping, 

Yet hiding from the world grief's wound and smart ! 

The Mater dolorosa, vigils keeping 

O'er her Son's tomb, scarce bore a sadder heart. 

Now dawns thy brighter day, thy compensation ; 
The cross so meekly borne at last laid down, 
Thou comest up through earthly tribulation 
Unto thy blood-washed robe, thy victor's crown. 

Dear mother-heart, so brave and yet so tender, 
Counting as naught love, labor, sacrifice, 
The seed sown here in toil and tears, shall render 
Sheaves golden and immortal in the skies ! 



"THY WILL BE DONE.'" 
By the Rev. C. W. Leffingwell, D. D. 

WE stood beside her little couch, 
With tearful eyes and struggling breath ; 
And vainly, in our wild despair, 

We strove with death. 

In agony we prayed to God, 

" Oh, spare ! oh, spare our little one ! " 
And then, by faith, we tried to say, 
" Thy will be done." 

Our breaking hearts would scarce consent ; 

Our quivering lips could scarce repeat ; 
At last we bowed submissively 
At Jesus' feet. 

Then, as we watched, a heavenly light 

Beamed from her large and lustrous eyes, 
Through which the soul serenely passed 
Beyond the skies. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 137 

We laid her wan and wasted form 

Beneath the whispering leaves to rest ; 
The angels gently placed her soul 
On Jesus' breast. 

Her little feet have never strayed — 
The paths of sin have never trod ; 
Our precious lamb is safe within 

The fold of God. , 

We love her still, and fondly keep 

The little clothes she used to wear, 
Her pretty playthings, and a lock 
Of silken hair. 

We love her still with hallowed love, 

Refined and purified by grief — 
By sorrow that alone in Faith 
Can find relief. 

God help us in these darkened hours ; 

We cannot bear our grief alone , 
Help us, though stricken, still to say, 
" Thy will be done." 



CHERITH. 
By Katherine N. Ward. 

FATHER! Thy blessed hand, in love, 
Still guides my footsteps here, 
And ever on my pilgrim way. 
Thy sheltering arm is near. 

Tho' raven wings of sorrow cloud 

The skies above my head. 
They bring a ministry of strength 

As from my daily bread. 



138 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH, 

As to Thy chosen one of old, 
They come with morning light, 

And still at quiet eventide. 
Scarce vanish with the night. 

Thy Cherith stream of blessing flows 

Yet day by day to me ; 
Nor will it fail until I stand 
^ Upon the glassy sea. 

When in that hallowed land above, 
The sinless joys of heaven, 

I drink the cup that ever flows. 
Redeeming love has given. 

Then shall each low^y sorrow come 
In white-robed angeFs guise, 

That pointed here the pathway home 
And led me to the skies. 



A MOTHER'S LOGIC. 
By the Rev. Frank N. Westcott. 

YOU are shocked at my strange confession 
Of an error, you say, that you dread, 
That I for my boy should be praying, 
Even now, when I know he is dead. 

I confess I 'm not skilful to answer 

In the old controversial art, 
The only defence I can offer 

Is the logic that springs from the heart. 

Suppose you had loved, with a passion 

That absorbed all your thoughts and your cares, 

A boy that God placed in your keeping, 

To be blessed by your love and your prayers ; 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 139 

And then when he grew into manhood, 
Felt the touch of a sordid world's life, 

And you knew the perils before him, 
That threatened his soul in the strife. 

You prayed all the more in his danger 

That his heart might be kept pure and fair, 

Till it seemed that each waking moment 
In its love was the breathing of prayer. 

Suppose that the shadow of suffering 

Deepened suddenly over the day, 
And your heart stood still in its anguish 

And you could do nothing but pray. 

As you watched and felt all too surely, 
As the darkness grew deep in the night, 

That everything dearest and truest 
Was departing far out of your sight. 

And after it all was quite over. 

And they 'd taken his body away. 
Then what would you do in your anguish 

That first night when you kneeled down to pray ? 

When you came to the place in your asking 
Where for years you had spoken his name. 

Would you choke down the words in your sobbing. 
As if for the thought there were blame ? 

Is the God that you love so cruel 

To forbid you this comfort so dear ? 
If you yield to your heart's deep prompting 

Must you do it with doubting and fear ? 

Has his soul ceased to need God's protection, — 

Gone quite out of reach of God's care, 
That there's nothing that God can give him 



In response to your heart-broken prayer 



140 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

He still waits with you his Lord's coming, 

Not yet is he perfectly blessed; 
His soul must grow purer and stronger, — 

God can give him refreshment and rest. 

Surely, then, you would pray for these blessings. 
Your heart could not help it, I 'm sure ; 

And in sight of the God that made you. 

All your prayers would be blameless and pure. 

And each earnest prayer that you uttered 
Would bring you more peace, if not joy. 

And keep you in closer communion 

With your sweet-hearted, angel-faced boy. 

And so had you loved him and lost him, 
You never could question your right ; 

You would kneel and ask God to bless him. 
As of old when you kissed him good-night. 



A THOUGHT. 
By a. V. R. S. 



THERE is a thought whose coming 
Has often made me glad ; 
It drives away the lonely pain 

That makes my spirit sad. 
This is the thought that soothes my pain 
In Heaven we can meet again. 

When many bitter fears arise 

That I may never see 
Again some dear, familiar face, 

Now far away from me, — 
To hush my fears, soft swells the strain : 
In Heaven we can meet again. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 141 

When thoughts that I could never reach, 

In case of need, the dying bed; 
That long ere I could gain the place 

They would be lying 'mong the dead ; 
Still comes the noble, sweet refrain : 
In Heaven we can meet again. 

When longing for a tender word 

From some one passed away, — 
Some love or some forgiveness breathed 

From now insensate clay, — 
There 's promise in the soothing strain : 
In Heaven we can meet again. 

Oh ! blessed promise, full of cheer 

To yearning hearts below ! 
What blessedness to feel, to hope, 

What blessedness to know 
That, though our loved are from us ta'en 
In Heaven we can meet again. 

Yes ! there we can our friends rejoin ! 

Free choice to us is given, 
Whether to say farewell for aye, 

Or, we will meet in Heaven. 
Christ's blood can wash away each stain. 
Through Him we meet in Heaven again. 

Here must we strive to do His will, 

And thus our human love, 
That once bound closely to the earth, 

Will draw us up above ; 
Blessings of parting will be plain 
When up in Heaven we meet again. 

And Father, when we praise Thy name 

For countless blessings here ; 
Or, when in some dark, lonely hour 

Slow falls the bitter tear, 
However we feel, we '11 swell the strain ; 
Thank God that we can meet a^ain ! 



142 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

VIA SOLITARIA. 
By Julia E. Phelps. 

THE night comes on — the silent night — 
And storms have ceased, the valley sleepeth. 
On forms beloved, far out of sight, 
My thought her solemn vigil keepeth. 

With holy hush I walk the round, 

Remembered voices softly calling 
My pilgrim feet to rest profound ; 

And chill with dew the night is falling. 

Dear scenes ! where once my Eden bloomed; 

The fairest flowers so quickly gathered, 
Storm-tossed and blighted, lie entombed. 

Cut down like grass, dried up and withered. 

Now strangers walk those windings sweet 
Where sleep the loved ones, free from ills. 

And other eyes with rapture greet 
The rosy dawn, the grand old hills. 

So far, and yet so near they seem, — 
The greenwood groves, the shady dells, 

The sunset glow, and in my dream 
Your holy chime, sweet Auburn bells ! 

I scarce could see, through tear-filled eyes. 
Ancestral homes and haunts forsaken. 

On golden blooms in other skies 

I gaze, and happier thoughts awaken. 

Though lost to mortal sight, I know 
They live again, in hom^s Elysian, 

Where streams of living waters flow, — 
I see them still, oh, wondrous vision ! 



POEMS OP CONSOLATION. 143 

Then will I stand beside the loved, 

When time is not, and love an ocean, 
All sin and striving far removed. 

And soul meets soul in rapt devotion, — 

There walk with them the golden street 
With Him who Life Eternal giveth, — 

Loved Jesus ! mine — oh, rapture sweet, 
To know that my Redeemer hveth ! 



"ASK AND IT SHALL BE GIVEN YOU." 
By C. H. B. 

"ASK what thou wilt ; it shall be done for thee, 
■t\ Each prayer is heard before My Throne above ; 

No prayer is left unanswered, made to Me 
In holy fear and penitence and love." 

" I know it. Lord ; yet I remember well 
The gifts I asked of Thee in early years ; 

They are not mine, — their joys I cannot tell, — 
For there is nought, save pain, and grief, and tears.'" 

" Didst thou, my child, pray for them in My Name, 

Obedient to the Father's holy will.'' 
Or didst thou — thought of sorrow deep, and shame — 

Seek God's sweet gifts for thine own pleasures still ? 

" The prayer is thine — the answer is Mine own; 

It ever comes on wings of mercy sent, 
Wrapt in the cross that daily weighs thee down, 

Folded within life's blessino-s to thee lent. 



144 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

'• Be strong, and patiently await My will ! 

Thy prayers shall find a home within My heart ; 
Be faithful unto death, that I may fill 

Thy soul with joys which never shall depart.'' 



" Do what Thou wilt, it shall be well for me ; 

I give myself to Thine eternal love. 
Grant to me, Lord, in Thy good time to see 

The answer to my prayers in realms above." 



THE LAST SLUMBER. 
By Edwin B. Russell. 

THE summer day in gradual close, 
Sank o'er the hills in purple rest, 
And glimmered in its soft repose, 
Through all the peaceful west. 
She slept ! the quiet evening breeze 
Had lulled her soul in gentle ease. 

She woke not as an old refrain 

Was sung by one w^ho loved her well ; 

The murmurs of a sweeter strain 
Upon her seemed to dwell, — 

Far echoes in the soul, to keep 

Her sorrows hush'd to heavenly sleep. 

The stars through all the shining skies, 
Rose o'er the fading twilight gloom ; 

Yet still she slept, while troubled sighs 
Breathed sadness in that solemn room. 

But she lay calm in blessed grace. 

And made that room a holy place. 



POEMS OF CONSOLATION. 

Yet darker grew the evening gloom, 
Still brighter shone the starry sky, 

And on her face there came a bloom, 
As if an angel nigh 

Had touched his harp, and o'er her flung 

The magic of the song he sung. 

She slept : the waves of moonlight filled 
Through all the heavens a flood of peace. 

Softly the heart-beats paused and stilled — 
And yet more soft her soul's release. 

Release and rest ! nor joy nor pain 

Shall wake her to the world again. 

But sometimes in the light of stars 
We think we see her gentle smile ; 

And oft through music's golden bars 
We think we hear her voice awhile. 

Where'er she is — what sea, what shore — 

We know her blessed evermore ! 



•45 



lo 




^oem^ of patience* 



WAITING! 
By Maie Allyne. 

I STAND and wait at the beautiful gate, 
But it opens not for me, 
While over its bars, 'mid the tender stars 
One bides, my sweet companie. 

In this weary lartd, may I touch His hand, 

And feel His star's guiding ray. 
Though I wait so long, through the pain grown strong 

I shall reach the shining way. 

Then may I behold by the gleam of gold 

Why the cloud o'ershadows here, 
And the Lord denies to my pained eyes 

Glad use, in His service dear. 

While to hold me still, if it be His will, 

With a loving heart and true. 
Is a service meet, to the Lord as sweet 

As the love that hastes to do. 

So I sing to my heart, and the song impart; 

'T is a sunbeam through ways dim, 
Sometime I shall know, when the tide ebbs low, 

Somewhere will my love find Him. 



148 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

SILENTIUM. 

By David Melville. 

I STAND and wait in shadow at His feet, 
The silence lies around me, pure and sweet, 
And I am dumb and ready as is meet. 

I know my Master sees me standing here ; 
So, though in gloom, I cannot let a fear 
Enter my heart ; for He is ever near. 

Around me, and about me, and above, 
The shield and shelter of His mighty love 
Clings close, and will not ever let me rove. 

I long, I pray a laborer to be, 

I listen for His least command to me, 

But still He wills it that I wait to see, — 

Ready to toil or suffer for His sake, 

But yet contented with this present state, — 

" They also serve who only stand and wait." 

Few tasks appointed fill my little day ; 
But I can let, through me, some tiny ray 
From His true light illumine the dark way. 

Perhaps in time the blest command will come 
That sends me forth a guide to those who roam, — 
To bring with loving care some wanderer home. 

Meanwhile, dear Lord, give me Thy grace most sweet, 
To wait with patience 'neath Thy mercy seat, 
And fall in adoration at Thy feet ! 

Ready to do whatever is Thy will, 

With praise to Thee some other life to fill, 

Or, if 'tis best, to suffer and be still. 



150 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

"HE LEADETH ME." 
By M. E. Palmer. 

IN pastures green ? Not always : sometimes He 
Who knoweth best in kindness leadeth me 
In weary ways, where heavy shadows be, 



Out of the sunshine, warm and soft and bright, 
Out of the sunshine into darkest night. 
I oft should faint with sorrow and atfrisfht. 



Only for this — I know he holds my hand; 
So whether in a green or desert land 
I trust, although I may not understand. 

And by still waters ? No, not always so : 
Ofttimes the raging tempests round me blow, 
And o'er my soul the waves and billows go. 

But when the storm beats loudest, and I cry 
Aloud for help, the Master standeth by 
And whispers to my soul, " Lo ! it is I." 

Above the tempest wild I hear Him say ; 
"Beyond this darkness lies the perfect day; 
In every path of thine I lead the way." 

So whether on the hill-top high and fair 

I dwell, or in the sunless valley where 

The shadows lie — what matters? He is there. 

And more than this ; where'er the pathway lead, 
He gives to me no helpless, broken reed, 
But His own staff sufficient for my need. 

So where He leadeth I can safely go ; 
And in the blest hereafter I shall know 
Whv. in His wisdom. He hath led me so. 



POEMS OF PATIENCE. 151 

NO LIFE FOR NAUGHT. 
By E. S. 

AN insect on the under side a leaf, — 
Its home, its world, that yet unnoticed falls 
From some great tree that stretches wide its arms 

And to its shade the grateful cattle calls ; 
Less than the least of worms like this am I, 
Yet known and cared for by one watchful Eye. 

Or stood that tree deep in some forest vast 

Where myriad leaves bud forth and live and die, 

Then in the dust, in fragrant, billowy heaps. 
Trod by chance wayfarers, unnumbered lie ; 

Such, Lord, am I, and yet my very dust 

I know that Thou wilt keep, a sacred trust. 

Perhaps the worm that lives its little day 
On that green leaf, a thread so fine may spin 

That, wrought in some rich fabric, it may deck 
A queenly form, and words admiring win : 

Even so Thy grace can take some word of mine, 

And in Thy Bride's own raiment let it shine. 

Perhaps from that forgotten, mouldering heap 
Some little seed, by bird or wild bee brought. 

May spring up to some flower of beauty rare ; 
Then was that little leafs short life for naught ? 

So would I sleep forgotten in my grave, 

While o'er my head such flowers of beauty wave. 

A speck, a mote among unnumbered worlds 
And countless ranks of being, — such our lot. 

What can we hope ? Awhile our part to play, 
To weep, to laugh, then die and be forgot ; 

Yet has each life its place, its work, its crown, 

Its just reward, its endless, sure renown! 



It; 2 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

"EVEN AS THOU WILT." 
By F. Burge Grisvvold. 

CAN God's sweet gifts to me, 
Dependent be 
On my own wish and wdll ? 
Is it as I may choose, 

Or may refuse, 
That Jesus will fulfil 

j\Iy spirit with his grace, 

Or will efface 
His image from my soul, 
And either reign within, 

Or leave to sin 
And Satan all control ? 

Oh ! dreadful power of mine ! 

Lord, I resign 
My wish and will to thee. 
So shall my soul aspire, 

With strong desire. 
Thy holy child to be. 



WAITING. 
By L. D. S. 



AT Jesus' feet a young disciple fell, 
And poured forth his complaint : " O Lord, w^e know 
Beyond what Thou dost will sin cannot go. 
But it is hard to war with shades of hell 
Thy shining presence would at once dispel ; 
It is so Ions: to wait the end of w^oe ! " 



POEMS OF PATIENCE. 153 

His guardian angel stood and whispered low, 

" Thou hast thy task ; do that — all else is well ! " 

He rose, and with a sigh the voice obeyed, 
And all his soul bent to his task alone, 
Unheeding how age followed youth's bright noon, 
Until the angel came again and said : 
" The Master calleth ; rise, thy task is done ! " 
And then he cried, in wonder rapt : " So soon? " 



"HE LEADETH ME." 
By the Rev. E. B. Russell. 

UPON my chamber's pictured wall. 
Before my couch this text I see, 
Where first and last mine eyes must fall. 
The blessed words — 
" He leadeth me / " 

The dawn's, bright rays the sentence show, 

That so may waking joyous be ; 
At midnight in the firelight glow 

The shining words — 

He leadeth me ! 

It tells how all the day my Lord 

Lights all my paths, His will to see, 
And when I sleep keeps watch and ward : 

The guardian words — 

He leadeth me ! 

In health, as happy moments fly 

, When the sweet chords of life agree. 

Or when in pain or grief I sigh : 

The precious words — 

He leadeth me ! 



54 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

How dear the hand that wrought this text 

In iove, that I might daily see, 
If joyful, sad, serene, perplext, 

The tender words — 

He leadeth me ! 

Be it the motto of my life. 

In mart or field, on land or sea : 
My conquering song in death's dread strife. 

Triumphant words — 

He leadeth me ! 



IN THE PRINTING OFFICE. 
By J. C. S. 

I CANNOT read it, Father; Father, see! 
I cannot read it, spell it out for me ; 
I thought that surely I my letters knew. 
But this I find I really cannot do." 

So spake a child who at his father's side 

Walked through a printing room and vainly tried 

To read the type. The printer smihng laid 

Upon the press a sheet, and kindly said, 

" Come, little one, and try to read once more 

These letters, for they were reversed before 

But now they 're plain." The clouds from that fair brow 

Have passed away, for he can read it now. 

So with our Father's dealings. Day by day 

We try to read, and puzzled turn away. 

We do not understand, we cannot see 

Why this was done, or that allowed to be. 

But in the world to come, through His clear light, 

We too shall read the mystery aright. 



POEMS OF PATIENCE. 155 

THE SCULPTOR. 

By a. B. p. 

'nn IS the Master who holds the mallet, 
X And day by day 

He is chipping whate'er environs 

The form, away ; 
Which, under His skilful cutting, 

He means shall be 
Wrought silently out to beauty 

Of such degree 
Of faultless and full perfection 

That angel eyes 
Shall look on the finished labor 

With new surprise, 
That even His boundless patience 

Could grave His own 
Features upon such fractured 

And stubborn stone. 

'T is the Master who holds the chisel ; 

He knows just where 
Its edge should be driven sharpest. 

To fashion there 
The semblance that He is carving ; 

Nor will He let 
One dehcate stroke too many, 

Or few, be set 
On forehead or cheek, where only 

He sees how all 
Is tending — and where the hardest 

The blow should fall. 
Which crumbles away whatever 

Surperfluous line 
Would hinder His hand from making 

The work divine. 



56 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

With tools of Thy choosing, Master, 

I pray Thee, then, 
Strike just as Thou wilt, as often. 

And where, and when, 
The vehement stroke is needed ; 

I will not mind. 
If only the clipping chisel 

Shall leave behind 
Such marks of the wondrous working, 

And loving skill. 
Clear carven in aspect, stature, 

And face, as will, 
When discipline's hands are over. 

Have all sufficed 
To mould me into the likeness 

And form of Christ, 



M 



MY STRENGTH AND I, 
By Frances M. Buchan. 



Y strength and I were boastful 



0"er the evil that might come ; 
We had worked together bravely 
Through tempest, shadow, sun. 

The heights that towered above us 

We scorned as trivial things ; 
We made the ascent, fearless. 

For the triumph that it brings. 

My strength and I knew nothing 
But endurance brave and strong; 

We smiled when others fainted, 

Though the way seemed drear and long. 



POEMS OF PATIENCE. 157 

We thought this, consecration — 

My silly strength and I ; 
Deemed it the Master's calling, 

For which we 'd dare to die. 

A human pride did flatter 

My foolish strength and me ; 
The grace and faith that quicken, 

Our blindness could not see. 

A storm then fell about us, 

A whirlwind from the sky ; 
We fought and struggled with it, 

My own proud strength and I. 

A. bitter, bitter contest, 

A friendship lying dead ; 
My strength and I did bury 

That whence the soul had fled. 

My strength and I drew closer 

And vowed we 'd never part, — 
We were so true and trusting 

In word and deed and heart. 

Then came a fear, so sudden 

Our very soul did quake ; 
My strength and I did tremble 

O'er the havoc it did make. 

And burden after burden 

Fell on my strength and me, 
Till at last we staggered blindly 

With a load of misery. 

Prostrate we fell, and waited, — 

No human aid had we ; 
The Master's voice did call us — 

My shattered strength and me. 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

His loving Hand did raise us, 

He gave us power to see ; 
Thy grace, O God, can succor — 

We owe our strength to Thee. 

Now is the truth made manifest 
To my humbled strength and me ; 

At our ]\I aster's feet low kneeling, 
His strength in all we see. 

The cross 'neath which we stumbled 

Has raised us up anew, 
We pray, my chastened strength and I, 

For grace His work to do. 



►■-Mis,* 




Eegeniiatp anti SiHIegorical ^oem^* 



A CHRISTMAS LEGEND. 
By L. D. S. 

IN years gone by, e'er man had seen 
A cross-capped spire, or heard a bell 
Its Christmas benediction tell, 
When Force was king and Pride was queen, 

Three captives in a dungeon lay, 

Each in a lonely cell confined. 

Bound hand and foot, chained heart and mind, 
Shut out from hope and life and day. 

A dark-skinned man from tropic skies. 
Whose sweat-damp brow was overhung 
By matted locks, that round it clung 

Above the gleam of sullen eyes, — 



l6o LYRICS OP THE LIVING CHURCH. 

This was the first : the stones his bed : 

For gems, steel bands "round hands and feet 
The rumble of the busy street 

For lullaby above his head. 

Strange the next cell ! A woman there 
As graceful as young alders are. 
Pale as the moon, each eye a star 

Gleaming beneath her dusky hair. 

And yet those eyes are dim with tears ! 
And see ! — they fall on chains of gold 1 
Those gorgeous draperies enfold 

A heart of woe, a breast of fears. 

The third, — the last and worst of wrongs I — 
A little child, with garments torn, 
And face with care too early worn, 

His feet confined with silken thongs. 

Thus lay these captives many a year, 
Nor looked for succor save from death, 
When on a day with bated breath 

They heard an unknown step draw near, — 

A gentle step, as maid or boy. 

Yet firm, as one who for the right 
Goes forth into the deadly fight, — 

A crown, a grave, were equal joy. 

The first strong door flew open wide : 
The Fettered saw before his face 
One full of glory and of grace, 

As childhood were it deified. 

'• Be free, O brother ! "" From his hands 
And feet fell off the smitten steel ; 
" Henceforth Love's dear constraining feel. 

And joy to ser\-e where He commands." 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. i6l 

Again before that beauteous Child 

The fast-barred door swung open wide, 
And hastening to the woman's side, 

He looked into her face and smiled. 

" Who called thee Eve and bound thee here 

As Mary every tongue shall bless. 

Mother " (with infinite tenderness), 
" Love perfected shall cast out fear." 

His hand her golden fetters clave : 

She rose, and with an angel's look, 

Her draperies and ointment took, 
And bound the chain-wounds of the slave. 

With smile of deepest love and joy 

The Child threw wide the last barred door, 
And, filled with holy anger, tore 

The thongs from off the fettered boy. 

The slave, at Love's unvoiced behest, 
Lifted and gave the little one 
Into the woman's arms. " My son ! " 

She cried, and clasped him to her breast. 

From thence into the light of morn 

The freed ones — now but three — outpassed. 
Bells pealed. " What is this joy ? " they asked. 

Men stared. " Whence came ye ? Christ is born ! " 



A LEGEND OF SAINT AUGUSTINE. 
By Mary Bayard Clarke. 

WITH study spent and worn with care 
A bishop wandered by the sea, 
A reverend Father of the Church, 
And skilled in its disputes, was he. 
II 



1 62 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Long had he sought to know that truth 
Whose height no human mind can reach. 

And earnest prayed for light divine 

On what he should and should not teach. 

What was that God-Head over which 
The subtle Greek in keen debate, 

Had wrangled until Christian love 

Seemed almost quenched in deadly hate: 

As wrapped in thought he slowly walked, 
Scarce conscious of the evening breeze, 

Upon the great sea's sandy beach, 
A little child at play he sees. 

"What dost thou. Httle one ? "' he said, 
As with a conch-shell in each hand, 

The child bore water from the sea 
To fill a hole scooped in the sand. 

"Just what you vainly strive to do." 
With solemn look the child replied; 

" I seek to drain the ocean dry 
To fill a hollow by its side. 

" As well do this as tr}- to crowd 

Infinite truth in finite mind, 
Or with your puny human powers 

The secret things of God to find." 

Startled to hear from childish lips 
A truth so pointed yet so grand. 

The bishop bowed his head and cried. 
" Before Thee, Lord, rebuked I stand." 

But when he raised his eyes and saw 
The child had vanished from the beach, 

He felt it v/as an angel sent, 

This miffhtv truth to him to teach. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 163 

THE LEGEND OF SAINT DOROTHEA. 

(Inscribed to Flower Missions.) 
By Katharine Read Lockwood. 

FAIR Dorothy went up and down 
The lanes and by-ways of the town, 
God's peace upon her gentle brow, 
God's peace within her heart, I trow, — 
A maid whose every thought was given 
To deeds of love and hopes of heaven. 

Her hfe was made of sweet content : 

On charity's kind errands sent 

To souls that hungered, souls in pain, 

To souls that doubted, souls in chain ; 

Where ways were dark and men were fearing, 

This lovely lady came with cheering. 

The cross, Christ's symbol now world-wide, 
A few brave hearts owned then aside. 
The few brave hearts that bore His Name 
Acknowledged Him through scoff and shame : 
Fair Dorothy of these, — not hiding 
Her Lord's reproach for foe's deriding. 

One day a tumult rose in Rome, 

Where Dorothea had her home. 

" Seize all the Christians ! " was the or)-, — 

" Let not one Nazarene go by ! 

Ransack all corners of the city ! 

And burn them without show of pity." 

Fair Dorothea with the rest 
Was borne upon the crowd abreast. 
Calm, pitiful, crossed by no doubt, 
To Christ the Lord her heart went out. 
What were her brief and fleeting losses 
To His and all the martyrs' crosses 1 



1 64 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

A youth, attracted by the stir, 

" Ho, Dorothy ! " called out to her 

(Speaking within his palace door), 

" You've had your way. What ask you more ? 

You would not listen to my warning, 

And so you die this dreadful morning. 

" I could have saved you had we wed. 
A broken reed, when all is said. 
Is this Jew-god on whom you lean ! " 
She smiled, blue-eyed, gold-haired, serene. 
" Nay," said she, without fail or falter; 
" My sole Love waits me at the altar." 

" You rave, you rave ! You throw aside 
Life, beauty, wealth, and youth ! " he cried. 
" I go to Life more fair by far 
Than any dreams of mortal are. 
This night I shall behold the flowers 
That bloom in Paradise's bowers." 

" Oh, flowers ! " he scoffed ; " oh, Paradise ! 
You cheat yourself with fool's device ; 
And yet I love you. This right arm 
Would even yet shield you from harm. 
Only recant ! " "And miss the blessing 
That follows on a good confessing ? 

" Oh, slow of heart ! Why doubt you this ? 

Nay, when my soul hath gained her bliss, 

I '11 pray some roses from the Warden 

Of the immortal, heavenly garden; 

I '11 send them to you as a token 

That true are all the words I 've spoken." 

She bowed her head, smiled, passed to death, 
Praising her God with latest breath ; 
And many mourned her in the town 
Where she went kindly up and down; 
And one man, plunged in wild excess. 
Could but lament her none the less. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 165 

That night a knock came at his door : 
He opened it, and stood before 
A boy with seraph brow and eyes, 
Who, facing his confused surprise, 
Held him fair boughs with roses laden, — 
Gifts from the blessed Martyr Maiden. 

Next day a rumor rang along 

The wondering city's busy throng, — 

Saint Dorothea's lover came 

To those baptizing in Christ's Name ! 

" I do repent ! " he cried. " Believe me, 

And as Theophilus receive me." 

Thus Theophile and Dorothy 

(God's gift, God's love) in mystery 

Of Baptism united were ; 

And he became a minister 

Of the young Church, and fondly cherished 

Her Faith until for it he perished. 

So runs her legend, fair and wise. 
Who roses sent from Paradise ; 
And in her name the Church since then 
Sends flowers forth to suffering men, — 
Such as she toiled among when living. 
Sweet hints of heavenly comfort giving. 



DOMINE, QUO VADIS? 

(A Legend of Saint Peter.) 
By Mary Bayard Clarke. 

IN the dark days of Nero's reign, 
Whose hand with Christian blood was red. 
Trembling before the heathen's rage, 
From Rome, Saint Peter faithless fled. 



1 66 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

'T was night ; and through the cit}- gate, 
Where drunken guards in silence slept, 

No angel walking by him now, 
With stealthy step he slowly crept. 

Fear paralyzed his soul, until 
The dangerous spot was safely past, 

When conscience raised her voice and spoke 
Those words his Lord had uttered last. 

Bowed down with shame, Saint Peter walked, 
Till in the twilight dim and gray, 

He saw a well-remembered Form 
Pass slowly down the Appian way. 

" Lord, whither goest Thou ? " he cried, 
And marked the cross the Saviour bore ; 

" I go to Rome," his Master said, 
"There to be crucified once more." 

Saint Peter could not meet that glance 
Of pitying love and deep reproof, 

Seen once, and only once before, 
W^hen from his Lord he held aloof. 

Overcome with mingled grief and shame. 
He fell in anguish on his knees, 

As gliding slowly on to Rome, 
His Master's fading Form he sees 

It was enough ! in his grand soul 
All fear and shame forever died ; 

Backward he turned, and nobly wrought, 
Till he at Rome was crucified. 

And still, beside the Appian way, 
The mark of Jesus' feet is shown ; 

But, ah ! its living print remains 
In human hearts, and not on stone. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 167 

"DE IMITATIONE CHRISTI." 

By Harriet W. French. 

It is told of Thomas \ Kempis that as he walked with his brethren 
in cloister and garden, he often withdrew from them, saying, " Dear 
Brethren, I must go ■, One is waiting for me in my cell." What the 
voice of the Beloved said to Thomas and what the voice of the Disciple 
replied, we find in the wonderful treatise treasured in the devotion of 
centm-ies, — the treatise " Concerning the Following of Christ." 

THROUGH the wide garden do the brethren pace, 
Where fall of fountains cools the crystal air 
And birds sing' sinless antiphon to prayer, 
And flowers breathe fragrant incense through the place. 

The brethren's hours of silence duly spent, 
Now, in familiar speech of things around, 
Of skies o'erhead and small blooms on the ground, 
They take their harmless pleasure, full content. 

For they who loftiest soar in heavenward flight. 
Find the earth fair, and with a child's meek heart, 
In lowly things learn God's dear love and art, 
And, pure of spirit, win divinest sight ; 

Joying in common charms of earth and sky. 
In every varying hue of pulsing light. 
In blushing rose, or lilies' mystic white. 
And wood-note wild by breezes borne anigh. 

So when from prayer and toil the brethren cease. 
Cheerful, their cares they lay aside awhile, — 
Freely go forth to bask in Nature's smile, 
And take her gentle benison of peace. 

In groups they stroll adown their 'customed walk. 
And one, whose voice thrills with a tender joy. 
As though some happy secret did employ 
His deepest thought, beneath his lighter talk, 



1 68 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Says, simply, to his brethren standing near, 
" Dear friends, I go : One waits me in my cell." 
And they, this Heavenly Favor knowing well, 
List, half in hope the Voice Divine to hear. 

What spake the \'oice, and what the low return 

Of the Disciple's earnest, meek reply, 

In holy interchange and converse high. 

They know whose hearts with love of Jesus burn, 

In pondering o"er the sweet, grave words which tell 
Of following Him whose voice bids us aside, 
Wondrously willing with us to abide. 
Awaiting each, in his own heart's deep cell. 




BROTHER PHILIP. 
By Harriet W. French. 

LOFTY the walls of stone, stern, strong, and gray 
Where live, of earthly life and love forgot, 
r^larking with toil and chant each peaceful day. 
The pious Brethren of the Common Lot. 

Among them, on his menial tasks intent, 
Patient to bear and do in daily round 

Each smallest duty, Brother Philip went — 
In hardest labor, chief contentment found. 

To others, in their penance or their praise, 
Were granted glimpses of the Life above. 

Visions of bliss repentant souls to raise 
To Him whose Being and whose Name is Love. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 169 

Never to Philip — counting weary years, 
All vain, his penances, his prayers, he deemed. 

Borne down and broken by his weight of fears. 
Of comfort, hope, or Heaven he hardly dreamed. 

Prone on the stony floor at dawn he lay, 
Pouring his heart out in one fervent prayer 

For patience to abide his Lord's delay. 
Lest faith should yield to sickening despair. 

" I am so weak," he cried, " so frail and fond. 
My sins have hid from me Thy Blessed Face ! 

I cannot soar these fleshly bounds beyond, 
To feel the warmth and glory of Thy Grace. 

" How have I longed for Thee, my God, my Light, 
And wearied heart and flesh in sleepless pain, 

Hoping, in torturing vigils of the night, 
Thou wouldst draw near and call me by my name.' 

" Dead even to God — forgotten in my cell, 
How dare I hope the Beauteous King to see. 

When saints alone — alas ! I know full well. 
Gain the blessed vision aye withheld from me 1 " 

A sudden glory thrilled the ambient air ; 
Warmth, fragrance, stillness filling all the space ; 

In midst, a radiant Form, Divinely fair, 
And, sweet through suffering, smiled the Saviour's face. 

Quick, Philip stretched forth worn and wasted hands, 
The raptured silence by no breath he broke. 

Waited Love's sweet, compulsory demands — 
Alas ! no voice the tranced hush awoke. 

But with imperious call clangs forth the bell, 
The poor are gathered at the Convent gate ; 

Why comes not Brother Philip from his cell, ' 
To dole the daily food for which they wait? 



lyo LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

He cannot go — What ! leave his gracious Guest, 
So long awaited, sought with anguished cry, 

When years may lapse e'er, all his fears at rest. 
Death sets him free to see his Lord on high? 

Again the walls give back the bell's deep tone. 
And angry sounds of mingled voices rise ; 

A lull — and Philip hears a child's weak moan — 
Then Famine's outcry, drowning women's sighs. 

One instant lingered he upon his knees, 
Recalling that his Master once had said, 

'• To Me is done whate'er is done to these," 
Then forth to feed his Master's poor, he sped. 

His sacred labor ended, back he hied, 
To kneel within his late transfigured room, 

When lo ! even yet the place is glorified, 
All richly glowing as a rose in bloom. 

" Philip, Beloved, faithful in thy place ! 
Hadst thou remained and left My poor unfed. 

In selfish hope of more exceeding grace, 
Leaving thee all unblest I must have fled." 

So spake our Lord, in tones of tender calm. 
And raised o'er Philip's head Hands beaming light, — 

Dear pierced Hands, whose wounding is our balm, — 
Then passed, in act of benison, from sight. 



SAINT VERONICA. 

By the Rev. Melville K. Bailey. 

WEEPING she stood in that sad street 
Where, in morn's twilight gray, 
Passed murmuring the saddest throng 
That saw earth's saddest dav. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 171 

" O mournful lady, what hast thou, 

And wherefore dost thou weep, 
And why do thy tear-laden eyes 

So long their vigils keep ? " 

" I weep for Him ye bear away. 

Oh, lay this kerchief now 
With tender touch upon the drops 

That stain His sinless brow ! " 

They laid her kerchief on His face : 

Soft fell its folds, I ween, 
On brow and eyes and grieving mouth, 

Where'er love's mark was seen. 

And when they gave it back to her, — 

Oh, marvel strange to tell ! — 
It bore the image of His face 

Who loved our race so well. 

Then bear His body to the cross. 

Or bear it to the tomb, 
Or let its living glory rise 

From low earth's twilight gloom ; 

Yet this true lady hath the pledge. 

The seal of love and life, — 
Of love for earth ; of life when death 

Makes peace of deathful strife. 

And when the night drew down in shade, 

I think that she might see 
The Face that lived in that soft veil 

Sad with Gethsemane ; 

Or when the golden sunlight glowed 

In all its sacred folds. 
It shone with that unconquered Life 

No rocky chamber holds ; 



172 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Or when a breeze stirred all the threads, 
Would pass a mystic grace, 

Tender with pity and with love, 
Upon the wondrous Face. 

And if it be not still at Rome, 

In Milan, or in Spain, 
Yet is the tale not all untrue, 

Xor told us all in vain ; 

For all the world is but a veil 
Laid o'er Christ's living Face. — 

In all its threads, and all its folds, 
His hkeness we may trace. 

His Image lives in earth's wide fields : 

It trembles on the sea : 
'T is joyous in the day's bright glow, 

Sad in night's mystery. 

It is to us the faithful pledge, 
The seal of love and life, — 

Of love for earth : of life when death 
jMakes peace of deathful strife. 



A MANSION IN HEAVEN. 

(A Legend of Saint Thomas, Bishop of Abyssinia.] 
By Mary Bayard Clarke. 

HIGH in the favor of the king, 
Thomas the Apostle stood : 
Bishop of Abyssinia he. 

Whose title was " the Good." 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 173 

" I trust this Christian," said the king ; 

" And in my absence he 
Shall with my gathered treasures build 

A palace grand for me." 

And then his treasury keys he gave 

Into Saint Thomas' hand : 
" Two years I take my journey far, 

And leave thee in command. 

" Build thou for me a palace fair, — 

Fairer than any known. 
Thyself inspect each joist and beam, 

And lay the corner-stone." 

He said, and on his journey went. 

Saint Thomas oped the door, 
And daily from the treasury took 

Money to feed the poor. 

And in the monarch's name he gave 

Outside the Church a dole ; 
While he within prayed God that Christ 

Would turn the heathen's soul. 

The years pass by : the king returns 

His palace to inspect. 
And finding none, in prison threw 

The recreant architect. 

" I '11 torture thee till back I get 

The treasures thou hast spent." 
Without an answering word, the saint 

To prison calmly went. 

That night, while in the prison bound 

Saint Thomas praying waits. 
In sleep the angel took the king 

Up to the Golden Gates. 



174 LYRICS OF THE LIVIXG CHURCH. 

'■ Look in, O mighty king 1 "" he said : 

'• Thy stately palace see I 
'T ^yas with thy treasures built by prayer 

In Paradise for thee. 



'• Eternal, and not made with hands, 
Where neither moth nor rust 

Can fret that treasure or consume, 
Saint Thomas stored thy trust. 

'• Its stones are alms he daily gaye 

From death to saye thy soul, 
And earnest prayer the cement which 

ConsoHdates the whole."" 

In awe the Abyssinian king 

Before the angel bowed, 
And in the trouble of his soul 

In sleep he cried aloud. 

Trembling he woke, and straight arose. 

And to the prison went, 
And at the Apostle's feet so low 

His kingly head he bent. 

" Teach me,"' he said, --that so I may 

Dwell in that mansion fair 
"Which thou hast built in Paradise 

For me by alms and prayer." 

With his own hands he loosed the bonds= 

And led the saint away. 
Who in his church baptized the king 

And all his house next day. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. i 75 



LAW AND LOVE. 
By L. D. S. 

I GAVE to Law a task to do — 
A morning journeying to take — 
And whispered softly : '* For my sake ! " 
As sadly from his playmates he withdrew. 

Across his features fell the shade, 
And with no parting kiss he went ; 
I stood and marked his discontent, — 

Stood saddened — yet he had not disobeyed. 

I gave to Love a task to do — 
A far-off journey in the night ; 
Her upturned face grew strangely bright. 

Her parted lips smiled back, " Oh, yes, for you ! " 

Not even did her singing cease, 
As quickly she rose up from play, 
And with a soft kiss sped away. 

And left my eyes all tears — my heart all peace. 



w 



THE MISTLETOE. 
By the Rev. C. S. Percival, Ph.D. 



HEN summer is green 'mid the shadowing trees, 



Where fondly the mistletoe clings, 
The passer perhaps in the verdure ne'er sees 
What they hide with their sheltering wings. 
It may flourish unseen 
'Mid the wide-spreading green 
Of the fostering bough where it springs. 



176 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

But the autumn comes forth on his mission of death 

To revel in summer's bright realm, — 
To scatter the leaves with his pitiless breath 
And the pride of the forest o'erwhelm : 
Then the mistletoe green 
In its beauty is seen, 
Clinging true to its desolate elm. 

And then 't is a joy in their beauty to see 

Its tiny white blossoms appear, 
Which ripen to fruit while the fostering tree 
In winter is naked and sere. 

Thus the mistletoe green, 
In the summer unseen, 
Findeth life in the death of the year. 

And thus in a heart that is noble and true 

The rarest of virtues may dwell 
In the time of prosperity, hidden from view 
By that which adorneth it well ; 
They may flourish unseen, 
Like the mistletoe green 
When summer is clothing the dell. 

But when the chill winds of adversity blow, 

And the pleasure that earth can impart, 
Like verdure autumnal, is shrouded in woe, 
Those virtues that never depart. 
Like the mistletoe green 
In the autumn, are seen 
Clinging true to that desolate heart. 

When Fortitude, Patience, and heavenly Faith 

In lustre undying appear, 
And life-giving Hope, sweetly smiling on Death, 
Points up to a holier sphere. 

Like the mistletoe green, 
All their beauty is seen 
When the winter of Hfe draweth near. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 177 

THE MERCIFUL SCRIBES. 

By Flavel S. Minp:s. 

A ROUND them, so the Moslems say, 
•^^ Two angels guard by night and day 
To keep all evil thought away ; 
And if a sinful deed is done, 
Before the setting of the sun, 
Or, e'er they lay them down to sleep — 
He who the daily sins doth keep 
Forbears to write, that for the sin 
The doer may crave grace within. 
And if the mortal doth repent 
Before the appointed time is spent, 
Estig fourillah (God pardons) then 
Is the only record of his pen. 

And he who standeth on the right 
Doth all their better deeds indite 
Before they can be lost to sight ; 
And if there comes a goodly thought. 
Or action blest by them is wrought, 
At once, the angel on the scroll 
Of Life, the record doth enroll ; 
Hoping that if death should fall 
Upon them unawares, o'er all 
The goodness would predominate. 
And earn for them the joys elate 
Of that life with pleasures laden, — 
The fair land, Jannat al Aden. 



12 



178 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

TREASURE. 
By Flora L. Stanfield. 

SADLY the rich man pondered : '• How can T. 
Knowing beyond all doubt that I must die. 
Gather my wealth together in my hand, 
So that, awaking in a fairer land. 
It will be there to greet celestial sight ? 
Let skilful lapidaries bring the light 
Of all their jewels to me ! " And he chose 
A brilliant diamond, cut hke a rose 
And worth a monarch's ransom. So he died 
And in God's time awoke, and loudly cried ; 
" Where is my treasure ? It was safe to-day ; 
I must have lost it somewhere on the way." 
" Be comforted ! " up spoke a shining one, — 
" Your treasure is intact ; each good deed done. 
Each penny given from your simple hoard 
When you had little, every struggle toward 
The heights the blessed reach, — all, all are here. 
" But my lost diamond ! " "I surely fear," 
Said the stern angel, " that the bit of dross 
You call a diamond will prove a loss 
Beyond retrieval." Then the rich man sighed 
And turned away, but suddenly espied 
A tiny globe of light. " Ah, here ! " he said, 
" Here is my jewel ! " and a glory spread 
Over his visage, but the angel smiled. 
" That is the tear-drop of a starving child 
To whom_ you ministered ; a banished tear 
Is called a diamond by dwellers here." 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 179 



THE MESSENGER OF PEACE. 
By L. L. Robinson. 

IN legends old — ^or dreams — I scarce can tell, 
But somewhere in the realm where memories dwell, 
I've heard the story told, how long ago 
The mighty sea, wild with some hidden woe. 
Beat its great breast, and tossing on its bed, 
Shook with deep sobs that filled the earth with dread. 
God's eye beheld ; the conflict sore and long 
Touched His great love, and moved by pity strong 
Gently He dropped within the seething whirl, 
From His own Throne, a pure and priceless pearl. 
Softly it fell, and lo ! with sudden thrill. 



Through all the sea there breathed a " Peace, be still 



And thus I think it was at* Christmas-tide, 

When, torn with sin and baffled human pride, 

Moaning in wild and unavailing pain. 

Tossing in struggles endless, sore and vain, 

Hopeless and worn with its unequal strife, 

A vast, despairing sea, lay human life. 

Then deep within this restless, seething whirl, 

Thy Life was cast, O Christ, a priceless Pearl, 

Down from the Father's Hand and Thy own Throne, 

Laden with balm which Thou, and Thou alone 

Could'st bring — Thou cam'st, and lo ! with deepening 

thrill, 
O'er all the sea there fell a " Peace, be still ! " 



l8o LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE SERMON OF THE ROSE. 
By Mary Livingston. 

WEARY with study and oppressed with care, 
One of earth's children sank in deep despair 
Upon a mossy bank where sweetly grew 
Some fragrant roses of the loveliest hue. 

And there within the cool, sequestered shade 
He wept, as all his life work he surveyed, 
How every thought had been for other's good, 
Yet thoughts and deeds had been misunderstood. 

The seed that he had scattered o'er the land, 
If grown, still brought no harvest to his hand ; 
The end of all was sorrow and regret, 
And grief weighed down his eyelids, and he slept. 

The sun went down, the night wind's gentle sigh 
Breathed o'er the dreamer as it wandered by ; 
A red rose bent its shining petals near, 
And softly whispered in the dreamer's ear: 

" Oh, foolish man ! why thus lament thy lot ? 
The rose, too, shares it and yet grieveth not, 
But gives its fragrance to the summer air, 
Nor asks one blessing of the world so fair ; 

" Content, indeed, if in some lonely hour 
It touched one heart with its unconscious power ; 
.For sunshine, rain, and dew, alike on all 
In tenderness upon earth's children fall." 

The dreamer moved, a shower of petals fell 
Upon his face, yet deep that silent spell ; 
And all the sweet rose said ere she was spent 
Sank in his heart and he arose content. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. i8l 

WAITING. 
By E. a. Clarke. 

HE stood in the golden glory 
Of the early morning light, 
While away in the dim, far distance 
Lay the fields for the harvest white. 

With eager heart he had waited 

As his comrades were called away, 
And he whispered, " Surely, the Master 

Will call me also to-day ! " 

But the soft bright tints of the morning 

Grew pale in the glowing sky, 
And the sunbeams' burning kisses 

Left the leaves and the flowers dry. 

To him there was sent no message, 

Though he waited, as oft before, 
While others went forth to garner 

The harvest's bountiful store. 

At length, when the falling shadows 

Told the close of the weary day. 
He followed the last, who left him 

Weeping along the way. 

And the messenger, turning backward 

Ere he entered the open gate. 
Said, with sweetest look and accent, 

" 'T is the Master who bids thee wait ! " 

They were not the words he had longed for, 

But he bowed to the Master's will, 
And with downcast eyes turned homeward, 

Searching their meaning still. 



l82 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

As slowly he walked, beside him, 
Growing close to the busy street, 

A lily he saw, dust-sprinkled 
And trampled by careless feet. 

With a feeling of tender pity, 
He knelt by the fragile thing, 

Its parched leaves bathed with water 
Pure and cold from a wayside spring. 

And all through the harvest season 
He watched it with loving care, 

Till at last a pure white blossom 
Crowned it with beauty rare. 

And he knelt with the happy reapers, 
All bringing their sheaves complete, 

With bowed head placing his lily 
Low at the Master's feet. 

And then there arose a murmur 
As the reapers about him pressed ; 

He raised his eyes, the fair blossom 
Was placed on the Saviour's breast ! 



DISCORDS. 
By Flora L. Stanfield. 

AN earnest pupil, wearily intent 
Upon the measures of a httle song; 
A patient teacher, with dim vision bent 

Upon the slender hands that move along, 
Interpreting vagaries which were born 
In a musician's heart one happy morn. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 183 

" Songs Without Words " upon the printed page 
Speak of the master dear beyond compare ; 

Songs without words, hke wild birds in a cage, 
Flutter and fall upon the drowsy air ; 

The reason why the teacher's sight is dim 

Is that one day such songs were sung to him. 

A tiny frown upon the pupil's brow, 

A crash upon the old piano's keys ; 
" There is none wise enough to tell me how 

To find the harmony in chords like these ; 
Poor Mendelssohn was surely half insane 
To spoil with faulty tones so fine a strain 1 " 

"My child," the teacher answered, "'tis the ears 
We listen with that makes the music sweet; 

He with untutored senses never hears 
The tones which make the melody complete. 

This rule remember for your future good ; 

Grand harmonies are discords understood." 

Our lives, like measures of the master's song. 
Have jarring notes, at which we, too, exclaim, 

" God did not fashion sounds so wildly wrong 
As are these discords, and He will not blame 

The one who sees no possible design 

In such a wasted life as this of mine " 

We tread a flinty path and cannot find 

The beauty in the mystery of pain ; 
Perchance the dust of labor makes us blind, 

We miss the road and find it not again ; 
And when the angels tell us of the way. 
We murmur, " Discord ! " at the words they say. 

The tender counsel of an anxious friend, 
The calm reproof in phrase of Holy Writ, 

The pleading eyes of one who would amend 

The tangled stitches our weak hands have knit, — 

" Songs without words " upon the air they fall, 

Words without songr we call them, one and all. 



184 LYRICS OP THE LIVING CHURCH. 

It may be that we shall not comprehend 
The subtle chords which so offend us here, 

Until we loose our sandals as we wend 
Our way to Paradise, its portals near, 

Where many a wandering minstrel wakes to find 

That he has left earth's discords far behind. 



THE LOVE-TOKEN. 
By L. L. Robinson. 

A CLOUD had o'er my spirit come, — 
A cloud that darkened all my light, 
And blotting out each star of hope. 

Enwrapped my soul in rayless night ; 
And still it deepened day by day, 
Till God Himself seemed far away. 

Alone I groped amid the gloom. 
Alone amid the darkness drear ; 

For though I knew that God was true, 
I could not feel His presence near ; 

And human hearts, alas ! are weak. 

And yearn to touch the Hand they seek. 

" O Thou who hearest prayer," I cried, 

" Vouchsafe my doubting heart to cheer 
Some token send, however small. 

That I may know Thou still art near, — 
Some gift so truly Thine alone 
That I may know it as Thine own." 

In half-unconscious, nameless hope, 

My trembling hand outstretched to clasp 

The mystic gift my yearning heart 

So vaguely sought and longed to grasp, 

And lo ! amid a strange, deep calm. 

Some gift seemed laid within my palm. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 185 

With heart that almost ceased to beat, 

With trembhng joy akin to fear, 
I raised my. bowed and drooping head 

To look upon the token dear ; 
But — oh, for joy so newly born ! — 
Behold my gift, a cruel thorn I 

With bitter cry my sobbing heart 

Sank crushed, as 'neath a sudden blow. 

Was this the answer to my prayer, 
Which only plead His love to know ? 

" O God, Thou mightst have spared me scorn ! 

I asked for love, — behold, a tJiorn / " 

But lo ! amid the deepening gloom, 
A low, sweet voice broke on my ear, 

" My child," it said, " didst thou not ask 
Some token of My Presence near, — 

Some token crave with pleading moan 

Which thou shouldst know as Mine alone ? 

" Then see ! — from out the chaplet worn 

On my own brow, for love of thee 
I 've plucked this one of many thorns, 

Which thou shalt keep for love of Me. 
Thou knowest on earth no wealth I own ; 
But this, at least, was mine alone." 

Could I have dreamt — ah ! could it be ? — 

That in my poor and lonely room 
My Saviour thus had really come 

To banish all my doubt and gloom ? 
Ah, yes ! The struggling beams of morn 
Fell softly on His gift, — my thorn. 

And so I keep it hid away, 

Too sacred far for careless eyes, 
Deep in my heart, where He alone 

Can see where thus enshrined it lies ; 
And when new clouds grow dark and drear. 
Its touch assures me He is near. 



l86 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE LESSON OF THE FLOWERS. 

By Flora L. Stan field. 

I CLAIM the right to be the first to greet Him," 
Sang the proud rose, her blushing cheek aglow ; 
" Though every flower that blooms be there to meet Him, 

He would my absence know. 
My color tells anew the thrilling story 

Of martyrs going smiling to their death, 
My perfume typefies the fragrant glory 
Hid in the censer's breath. 
Oh, let me at His feet my love disclose, 
Because I am a rose.'' 

Then spoke the purple flower of recollection : 

"A pansy is the blossom He would see. 
And in the morning of the resurrection, 

His thoughts will turn to me. 
My very name will win the priceless treasure 

Of praise from Him who is the world's heart's-ease. 
That day you give to Him unstinted measure 

Of love, upon your knees. 
Oh, let me, though of beauties I have least, 

Be first to grace His feast." 

" I have no boon to crave," said a white lily, 

" Nor any need to claim my rightful place." 
Her cheeks were pale, her mien and accents chilly, 

A cloud was on her face. 
" What flower should shme in all this fair adorning 

If not the one which mortals name the pure ? 
So, on the brightness of the Easter morning, 

My privilege is sure." 
Her scorn the heart's-ease stunned; her hauteur froze 

The ardor of the rose. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 187 

O rose, with love in each red petal blooming ! 
O pansies, with your faces washed in dew ! 
O lily, whom to praise would be presuming ! 

He needs each one of you ! 
Love is of earth if purity forsake it, 
And purity is cold if lacking love, 
And purest love needs grateful thoughts to make it 

Worthy of place above. 
So cease your strife, and all your beauty bring 

To greet the risen King ! 



PEARLS. 
By Callie L. Bonney. 

YOU may not see these jewels rare, 
Amid the braids of sunlit hair, 
In beauty gleam ; 
They deck not hands with queenly grace 
Nor add a charm to patient face. 
So like a dream. 

With radiant lustre half divine, 

Her pearls elsewhere in beauty shine, 

Bright, fair, alway : 
One, but the prayer of little child. 
Another, life from sin beguiled 

By her sweet way. 

The strife and pain her love hath stilled, 
The lives her ministry hath filled. 

With blessing fair, — 
These are her pearls, that softly glow; 
Could any jewel casket show 

Us gems so rare ? 



l88 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

AN AUTUMX VOICE. 
By Grace C. 

THE summer glow has faded from 
The garden, field, and lane: 
The blossoms from their sleep of death 
No sun shall wake again. 

Not all deserted are the haunts 
Of summer rose and spray : 

The autumn blooming lingers yet 
To cheer the shortning day. 

Yet whence the charm of marigold. 

Or china aster gay '^. 
Chrysanthemum or hollyhock, 

The dahlia's bright array ? 

Or who would seek the golden rod, 

Royal in robe and name. 
Yet humblest ^in its woodland life ? 

What magic doth it claim? 

The autumn blooming, whence its power ? 

What lesson doth it teach ? 
Sweet summer voices now are mute, — 

Have these no mystic speech ? 

Less fair and fragrant though they seem, 
These later autumn flowers, 

They bear a message, deep as sweet. 
To cheer life's shaded hours. 

The spirit which it breathes is hope. 

Triumphant over loss ; 
Its promise to the victor, Hfe, — 

The crown bevond the cross. 



LEGENDARY AND ALLEGORICAL. 

Enduring strength, abiding peace, 
The soul shall gain through gloom ; 

Earth's buried hopes immortal rise, — 
Thus speaks the autumn bloom. 

Though darker, sadder, grow the days, 

It lingers still to bless, 
Its mission one of peace and hope. 

Its might God's tenderness. 



THE SHULAMITE. 

By Sidney McLean. 

" I^HE king said to a peasant maid : 
J- " Come, thou, and be my love. 
The best in all my Court so fair — 
Apparel rich and jewels rare — 
Are thine, my love, my dove ! 

" Come, leave thy walks through field and glen ! 

Come, leave thy shepherd boy ! 
Thy face, so full of beauty's force. 
Will be a never-ending source 

To m.e of earthly joy." 

•• No, no ! " she answered, sadly sweet ; 

" Far rather would I go 
With him I love among the lilies, — 
To dwell with him among sweet lilies ; 

My heart is where they grow." 

The king was much amazed at this, — 

He could not understand 
Why from his love she turned aside 
To be a simple shepherd's bride. 

And join his lowly band. 



[90 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

But prayers and tears inclined his heart 

To send her on her way, — 
With mind so pure and love so meet 
To dwell among the lilies sweet, 

In love's most mystic sway. 

The prince of this world beckons us 

To come and be his bride. 
Oh, listen not ! Thy beacon bright 
Is Christ among the lilies white ; 

Thy place is by his side. 



LIFE. 
By Maria Batterham Lindesey. 

HOW beautiful is life when the first dawning 
Touches the sunrise hills, 
And all the glint and glow of early morning 
The wide east fills ! 

How beautiful is life at noontide's hour, 

When, glowing like the sun, 
Man's widening pathway, Ht with wondrous power, 

Is mapped and run ! 

How beautiful is life when eventide 

Is stealing softly on, 
And sunset's gates are flinging open wide 
Till day is gone ! 

How beautiful is life when mystic night 

Disrobes her starry breast. 
Gleaming with other worlds' far-distant light, 

And man must rest ! 




5^oem^ of draper anti ^rai^e. 



THE WORLD IS FAIR. 
By Emma Sophie Stilwell. 

WE will ne'er gie o'er that the warl is fair. 
An' life well worth the Hvin', 
That there 's more o' joy than o' carking care, 
An' o' pleasure than o' grievin' ! 

The birds sing blithe an' the children play 
In the glad, glad spring together ; 

An' the trees in the wind hae a merry way 
In the bright or the gruesome weather. 

An' hear the trills and throbs o' the brook. 
As it quavers its bass o'er the pebbles, 

Or gies out a shower o' silver notes 
In wildring warbling trebles. 

Then the liquid idyl of sweet content 
That the pine to the sun rehearses, — 

Rare pentameters of orient rhyme, 
Rich incense-breathing verses. 



192 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

An' the rose with dear, sweet lips o' bloom, 

Blushin' in silent speeches 
O' love an' praise to the Maker o' a', 

Such a bonny lesson teaches ! 

Then we '11 ne'er gie o'er that the warl is fair, 

An' life well worth the livin', 
While bird an' bough an' brook an' air 

Are grateful praise outgivin'. 



THE GREAT CHANGE. 
By the Rev. John May. 

BE Thou my light when night prevails. 
My solace m each sore distress, 
My Friend when earthly friendship fails, 
My Guide across this wilderness. 

As creatures whiten to the snow, 
My soul, reposing at Thy feet, 

Shall pure and ever purer grow 
Until the new man is complete. 

I would be near Thee if Thou wilt, — 
Be still, and wait, and grow hke Thee ; 

For Thou art goodness — I am guilt, 
But Thou canst take the sin from me. 

I want to stay beside Thee, Lord, 

And hold Thy hand, and see Thy face. 

To hear Thy lightest-whispered word. 
To drop the sin, and grasp the grace. 

I want the old, the bad, to die ; 

I want the new, the good, to grow, — 
Till I become another I, 

And Thou alone canst make me so. 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 193 

I want to do each thing 1 do 

Before Thy face, Thy smile to see ; 

To hate the false, to love the true, 

And be what Thou wouldst have me be. 

Ah ! weak am I. Nor can I keep 
This place beside Thee but a day; 

My hands hang feeble and I sleep 

When I would work, or watch, or pray. 

O Love divine ! low at Thy feet 

I prostrate fall. Hold Thou me fast, 

Change, cleanse, re-fashion me complete, 
And fit me for Thy home at last. 



CHRISTE, AUDI. 
By The Rev. J. R. Newell. 



w 



HEN the morning floods the sky, 
When the noonday sun is high, 



When the calm of eve is nigh. 
Hear us, holy Jesu ! 

When our daily task begins. 
And our toil its guerdon wins. 
Oh ! despite our many sins, 
Hear us, holy Jesu ! 

While we labor to acquire 
That which perisheth, inspire 
Something nobler, something higher: 
Hear us, holy Jesu ! 

And when ends our toil, and we 
Mingle in eternity. 
May we find ourselves with Thee ; 
Hear us, holy Jesu ! 
13 



194 LYRICS OP THE LIVIXG CHURCH. 

THINE THE POWER. 

By Frances E Gordon. 

FATHER, Thy children own Thy boundless sway 
With common glad accord, 
When, asking for our daily bread, we say 
Thine is the power, O Lord ! 

Thine is the power to give unto Thine own 

All riches earth doth yield, 
All perfect gifts that from Thy hand alone, 

Come with sweet promise sealed. 

Thine is the power by which we walk the earth 

Cheered by hope's gladdening ray; 
The while the happy spirits, Love and Mirth, 

Go with us on our way. 

Thine is the gracious power to satisfy, 

If so it be Thy will. 
Beyond our utmost thought, each pleading cry, 

Our heart's desire fulfil ! 

Thine is the power to make Thy soldiers fight 

Victorious over all ; 
So strong within Thy panoply of light, 

We cannot faint nor fall. 

Thy greater powder can help us when we meet 

Our foes upon the field, 
Wounded and spent, to rise from sore defeat. 

To fall, but not to yield. 

Thine, Thine the power to bring us even now 

Where we have longed to be ; 
Where, with Thy new name written on our brow, 

We shall Thy glory see. 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 195 

Yea, Thine the power to give these tired feet rest 

Within Thy shining walls, 
Beside the sea upon whose crystal breast 

The song of triumph falls. 

And Thine the power to let Thy Presence so 

With peace our spirits fill, 
That waking here or there we scarce may know. 

It is Thy kingdom still. 

Thine is the power to know our every need, — 

The power to choose and see 
Which path of sorrow or of joy will lead 

Thy children nearest Thee. 

O Thou, who hast all power in earth and heaven ! 

Pour on our souls Thy light ; 
Help us to take whate'er Thy love has given 

And use Thy gifts aright. 

Oh, let us trust Thy boundless power, each day, 

To send us what is best; 
To lead us safely by the chosen way 

Unto Thy perfect rest. 



LONGING. 

By Ella Mooney. 

Out of the depths have I called unto Thee, O Lord. Ps. cxxx. 
I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh mj' 
help. Ps. cxxi. 

OUT of the depths, unto the hills I call. 
With bowed face : 
" The depths," my home, " unto the hills," ray All, 
Thy dwelling-place. 



196 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

What figure could the holy singer use, 

More true indeed ! 
The mount is Thine ; the valley mine, whose dews 

My being feed. 

wondrous Sun ! to Thy transcendent height 

My spirit take ! 
Oh, draw me who am parched with thirst Thy might 
Alone can slake ! 

1 long to stretch these folded wings ; I feel 

A life within 
Awaiting but Thy call, to break the seal 
Impressed by sin. 

As Thou to Lazarus saidst in time of yore, 

" Come forth ! " so say 
To my imprisoned soul, and she shall soar 

To realms of day. 

Only a touch, a look of Thine, O King ! » 

Transformeth me 
Into a beautiful and holy thing, 

And worthy Thee. 

Whene'er I pass in worldly courts a day. 

With smile for smile ; 
Joining the chorus of. her witching lay 

Time to beguile ; 

At setting sun I am awearied quite, 

And ill at ease ; 
A lonely heart-sickness steals on with night, 

Naught will appease. 

Until I humbly turn again to Thee 

My Lover true ; 
Ah! then what comfort, rest, what ecstasy, 

Are born anew ! 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 197 

I must be thine. Naught satisfies, below, 

The craving soul. 
Chain the immortal in " the depths ? " Ah, no ! 

The height^ her goal. 

And yet, albeit I see in visions rare 

My mountain home, 
And hear the spirits of her purer air 

All bid me " come " — 

I have no power to climb alone ; aid me, 

O Friend Divine ! 
That I may soar " unto the hills ; " and be 

The glory Thine. 



A THANKSGIVING. 
By L. p. S. 

I AM so blest — I am so blest 
By Thee, my Friend, my King; 
My eyes grow dim with thankful tears 
That gather as I sing. 

No day but shines Thy sun, within 

A sky of cloudless blue ; 
No path but flowers spring up to greet 

Me with their shy — " For you ! "' 

No eve but brings its soothing peace, 

Though shadows lengthen fast ; 
No night but whisper stars to me, 

" There shall be rest at last ! " 

Therefore, dear Friend, once crowned with thorns, 
Now crowned with power, my King ! 

Thou knowest my thanks are true, although 
Tears gather as I sing. 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 




A GRADUAL.i 
By the Rev. Nelson Ayres. 

PRAISE to Thee, Lord, 
praise be forever given ! 
Praise on earth ! Praise, too, 

in the highest heaven ! 
Praise for grace vouchsafed, 
and for sins forgiven, 
Glorious Jesus. 

Praise for words, grand, 
sweet, of apostles' writing, 

Shining truth-beams, path- 
way to heaven lighting. 

" Other sheep," long lost, to 
the fold inviting. 
Merciful Jesus. 



at the Gospel's reading. 
While we see Thee, thou- 
sands with manna feeding. 
Thee with blood-mark'd foot- 
steps, to glory leading, 
Suffering Jesus. 

^ In Sapphic strophes. 




GRANT US THY PEACE. 
By E. M. W. 

FAR in the west the day is gently fading, 
Dark fall the shadows of the evening time, 
A holy calm all nature is pervading, 

Soft on the ear sings out the vesper chime — 
Grant us Thy Peace. 

Lord, since the morn, our erring feet have wandered. 
Far from the way in sorrow and in pain, 

With broken vows, and golden moments squandered, 
Weary and sad, we come to Thee again — 
Grant us Thy Peace. 



Thou, whose kind heart has throbbed with mortal anguish, 
O'er loved ones gone and sacred trust betrayed, 

Thou will not leave our souls in grief to languish ; 

Thou know'st our needs, withhold not then Thine aid — 
Grant us Thy Peace. 



200 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Dark grows the night, the weary world is sleeping, 
Yet darkness lurks within its curtained fold ; 

May angel bands their loving vigils keeping, 
Grant us, as erst Thy faithful saint of old — 
Grant us Thy Peace. 

Thou, whose dear feet have wandered, torn and bleeding, 
Thro' desert wild, and mountains' rugged way, 

We should be lost but for Thy gracious leading ; 
Guide us thro" darkness to the perfect day — 
Grant us Thy Peace, 



c 



A HEART-GARDEN. 

By Emma Sophie Stilwell. 

LEANSE this heart, O Lord ! but now 
Roused from wasteful slumber ; 



Where but weeds encumber. 

Let self-love be banished quite, 

Root out jealous fear, 
And let anger's flame be quenched 

By sweet pity's tear. 

Thou hast taught that gentleness 

Is the best reproving. 
Then let censure yield heart-room 

Unto ruthful loving. 

Then will love for humankind 
Spring and bud and flower, 

Making sweet to all around 
Morn and evenins^ hour. 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 20I 

LET THEM GIVE THANKS. 
By E. S. 

IF they give thanks who have known no weeping, 
Have felt no fear, and have wrought no sin, 
Their first estate, unfallen, keeping, 

Standing the light of their God within, 
Oh, what should they give who from weary strife 
Have entered the gate of eternal life ! 

If they give thanks on whose baby faces 
No shame hath passed, whom no sin defiled, 

Passing yet pure from love's embraces 
To His arms, who was once a little child, 

What thanks should they give whose crimson stain 

Is washed in His blood who for them was slain ? 

If they give thanks who have served Him ever. 
From childhood's morning through manhood's day, 

Their life flowing on like some peaceful river 
That knows no haste, and makes no delay. 

What thanks shall they give who have hardly won 

Pardon and peace e'er their day is done ? 

Let them give thanks whom the Lord, in pity, 

Found in the wilderness, far astray, 
And safely led to His holy City, 

With fire by night, and with cloud by day ; 
Now, safely within the golden wall, 
Let them at His feet adoring fall ! 

For love that forgave, restored, defended, 
For grace that renewed, sustained, and fed, 

For the watchful care that their steps attended, 
For the heavenly hope round their pathway shed. 

For the life He gave, and the death He died, 

Let them give thanks to the Crucified ! 



202 LYRICS. OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

FROM A HAPPY HEART. 

By J. C. S. 

In all time of our prosperity, Good Lord, deliver us. 

NOT with a soul with tempests shaken 
While tossing on life's, troubled sea, 
Not with a heart oppressed, forsaken. 

Come I, O gracious Lord, to Thee, — 
No load of care, no hidden grief. 
Moves me to seek Thy kind relief. 

Nay, 't is the mercies that surround me, — 
The sunbeams bright, the blossoms fair, 

These loving hearts I see around me. 

This wish fulfilled, that answered prayer. 

Bright memories, and hopes more sweet, — 

These bring me to Thy sacred feet. 

I ask not now for strength in sorrow, 
Or comfort for an aching heart. 

In fear lest thou should'st bid to-morrow 
These blessings suddenly depart; 

Ah, no ! — the grace for which I pray 

Is to bear joy aright to-day ; 

To take each separate gift or pleasure 

As token of that tender care 
Which I can never fully measure, 

Yet know surrounds me everywhere, 
And, though my sunshine turn to night, 
Still guides my wavering steps aright. 

O Father, let no bliss thou sendest, 
Fill utterly this wayward heart ; 

And while I take the joy Thou lendest 
Make me content therewith to part, 

When Thou shalt bid me yield to Thee 

E'en that which choicest seems to me ; 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 203 

And keep before my spirit ever 

The sense of my unworthiness, 
For what I am, whom thou dost never 

Forget to comfort and to bless ! 
Yes, let me always humbled be 
By each bright gift Thou sendest me. 



"WE WOULD SEE JESUS." 
By the Rev. J. Anketell. 

" A"^ 71^ would see Jesus ! " Dark the shadows gather, 

V V The lingering hght of day is almost done ; 
We raise our weeping eyes to Thee, O Father, 
And pray Thee : Manifest to us Thy Son ! 

"We would see Jesus ' " Apgry shouts defy Him, 
Proud science curls the lip at One it scorns ; 

Blind Pharisee and Sadducee deny Him, 
Wearing another cruel crown of thorns. 

" We would see Jesus ! " Now His face is hidden, 
The clouds receive Him up to realms of light ; 

Yet in the Sacrament His Love has bidden. 
He stands revealed by faith to mortal sight. 

" We would see Jesus ! " Haste the happy morning. 
That gives bright sunlight to a soul redeemed. 

Long have we watched through darkness for its dawning 
Oh, long and dreary has our vigil seemed ! 

" We would see Jesus ! " Mocked and in derision 
Our eyes have seen Thee, scourged and crucified ; 

Hasten, O Lord, the Beatific Vision, 

That sees Thee seated at Thy Father's side ! 



204 LYRfCS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

WORK AND PRAYER. 
By L. D. S. 

FIRST VOICE. 

NOW shineth the rising sun into thy bower ; 
Work ! Day calleth loudly on thee for thy task; 
Thy brain with its thought, thine arrn with its power, 

Await but to do what thy spirit sliall ask ; 
Fuse thought, power, and love in the work of the hour. 

SECOND VOICE. 

Ah ! brighter is God than the sun in his might. 

Pray ! Souls are not living that breathe not in prayer. 
Thy life is a vapor, swift passing from sight. 

The soul never dieth ; let that be thy care, 
Lest, affrighted, thou hear thy Lord's voice at the night. 

FIRST VOICE. 

Time spent on the knees is time lost in the race. 

Work ! He loves not the idler ; and bread must be got. 
Thy children's low cry, the tears on the face 

Of the wife who bemoaneth thy labor forgot — 
Art thou deaf .^ Art thou blind.? Seeking phantom-like 
grace ? 

SECOND VOICE. 

Harsher sound in thine ear will the dread w- ailing be 
Of children thrust out from the kingdom of heaven. 

They who wait on the Lord e'er they perish shall see 
The ravens bring food, rocks by water-springs riven. 

Love for children and wife ! Did not Christ die for thee ? 

THIRD VOICE. 

Peace, ye wranglers ! Why part ye what God hath made 
one .? 

For He that gave prayer is the same that gave toil; 
Therefore pray from the morn till the light is no more ; 

Yet no moment from work let thy tired hand recoil 
Till the task that was given at even is o'er. 



PRAYER AND PRAISE. 



205 



Prayer is work; and no work without prayer shall be 
blest. 
Work is prayer, if for Jesus our Saviour 't is done. 
Nerve thine arm with thy prayer, let thy work fire thy 
breast, 
And when into thy bower slants the slow setting sun 
Thy soul and thy body shall find each its rest. 





^s^sm^ 



^otm$ of lei^eDitation^ 



GRASPING AT SHADOWS. 
By Irene Griswold. 

SUCH a beautiful spray ! 
Just before me it lay 
On the walk that was flooded with light, 
One would scarcely believe 
That the touch could deceive, 
So real it was to the sight. 

Yet, on stooping to grasp. 

It eluded my clasp, 
Though the form was so clearly defined 

That I certainly knew 

From the shadow in view 
The substance was somewhere behind. 

Through the light of God's love 

The things from above 
Cast beautiful shadows below. 

These shadows I see, — 

They prove clearly to me 
The substance is somewhere, I know. 



208 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

WASTED. 

By Flora L. Stanfield. 

DEAR little hour ! if I could call you back, 
I would not chase a vagrant butterfly 
And let your blessings slip so idly by. 
Oh, come again adown the years swift track ! 
No care of mine shall your sweet moments lack 
If you will but come back ! 

Calm little day ! why did you fade so soon ? 
A day is long, I thought, and so I dreamed 
Away the golden hours ,; it only seemed 

A moment till the bells rang in the noon ; 

A moment more, and God hung out the moon. 
Why did you fade so soon 1 

Glad little year! where has your brightness fled? 
I prized you ; but I said, " So many days 
Make up the year that I will tread the ways 
The world has marked." But when with heart that bled 
I sought my little year — my year was dead ! 
Where had its brightness fled? 

So now I hasten up and down the street, 
And call to each and all, " Oh ! can you say 
If any year of mine has strayed this way ? 

Or if a wandering day or hour you meet, 

I pray you tell me, and I '11 run to greet 
Its joys with flying feet."" 

And thus I look for hour and day and year 

That I have missed so long ; perchance to some 
Unlooked-for place each waiting one will come 
To greet me; so I will be patient here, 
And pray that your lost glory may be near, 
Dear hour, calm day, glad year ! 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 2O9 

THE ORGANIST. 
By Edward Henry Eckel. 

HE sits him down at twilight hour 
Before the ivory keys, 
And lets his fingers wander o'er 
The clavier as they please 

The dreamer plays, and lets his dreams 

Take form whate'er they will, — 
Sometimes in diapasons full, 

Or voices small and shrill. 

And as he sits with whitened locks. 

Unbinding harmonies 
That speechless lie in soundless chains 

Beneath the placid keys, 

A golden ray from blazoned pane 
Streams in through pictured saint. 

And bending o'er him musing there. 
Creates a picture quaint. 

Transfigured in the waning light, 

A youth once more he seems ; 
Each silvery lock, no longer white, 

With golden sunlight gleams. 

The decades passed since youth was his 

Like broken dreams appear ; 
And like a dream this Evensong 

To weary souls so dear. 

The choristers have sung their psalms. 

And priest the lessons read ; 
But still absorbed the dreamer plays, 

To other fancies dead. 
14 



2IO LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

The pictured glass is dark again ; 

The flowing locks are white . 
The organ, moaning, dies in pain, 

As dies the fading light. 

Though dark and still the empty church, 

An angel flies o'erhead. 
And passing near with drooping wings. 

He leaves the dreamer — dead. 



REVERIE. 
By Castelmar. 



WHITE little sails far cut at sea, 
I watch ye, painted athwart the blue, 
The clouds a-dream in the sky above, 
And ye at rest on the same soft hue. 

October is rocking the earth to sleep, — 
With dreamy zephyrs is crooning low ; 

Full soon the November winds will heap 
Above its slumbers the sheltering snow. 

How strange to think that all this glow 
And glad abundance of life will lie 

So many brooding months benumbed, — 
Breathless and dumb, "neath a leaden sky ! 

O clouds and sails and earth at rest, 
Have ye not a lesson to teach my heart, 

As it feels its winter chill come on 

And the battling winds and storms upstart? 

Oh, that it too might learn to rest 

Safe in the shelter our God doth mark, 

Close and still on the Father's breast. 
Shuddering not at the storm and dark ! 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 21 1 

I wonder are they afraid — the flowers ? 

Do they tire of waiting, and long to grow ? 
Do roses weep through the winter hours, 

And violets shiver beneath the snow ? 

I fear me much 'tis my heart alone 

That questions the Hand outstretched to lead, 
And makes its weak, repining moan, — 

" Dost Thou forget my piteous need ? " 

Poor heart, sore heart, God pity thee. 
And clasp thee close and hold thee fast ! 

God pardon thine infirmity, 
And bring thy summer back at last ! 



*'0 VANISHED DAY!" 
By F. Surge Griswold. 

THE night is come, O vanished day ! 
What record hast thou borne away? 
The early dawn was fair and bright, 
With wishes pure, and purpose right. 

What of the hours ? Have Faith and Love 

Been diligent themselves to prove 

My guardian angels, covering 

Both speech and act with shining wing? 

Has Truth been near me with her brow 
As sunlight on the driven snow ? 
And Joy and Peace — have these stayed by, 
With an unwearied constancy ? 

What graces have I entertained ? 
What sinful inclinations chained ? 
Have heart and hands been freely given 
In holy charities, to Heaven ? 



212 LYRICS OP THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Was every passing moment fraught 
With good, in word, or deed, or thought ? 
The night is come, O vanished day ! 
What record hast thou borne away? 



UNDER THE TREES. 
By Julia E Phelps. 

AS friends, dear life-long friends, we love the trees ; 
High o'er our heads they rise, a lordly race. 
Yet spread their leafy tents with genial grace. 
And ever tireless stand to serve and please. 

The same to-day as when our lives began ; 

Beside the cottage door or palace gate, 

In majesty and constancy they wait. 

While come and go the brief, swift days of man. 

The timid bird that from the gentlest hand 
A crumb will scarcely take, casts out all fear 
Amid their leafy boughs, and sweet and clear 
Trills out its joyous lays o'er all the land. 

The homeless wanderer, whose clouded mind, 
Perchance, tho' rough the way his feet have trod, 
Still holds some lingering ray of trust in God, 
Their cool shade seeks, a touch of peace to find. 

Upon those distant scenes that vanish not. 
Where memory loves to wander down the past, 
Unchanged the trees their peaceful shadows cast, 
The leaflet's silvery tones are unforgot. 

Here, resting, dreaming, listening, free from care, 
New visions reach this poor, dim, mortal sight. 
The mist uplifts that hid the heavenly light, 
The soul communes with God in silent prayer. 



POEMS OP MEDITATION. 213 

AS WE LOOK UPON THE DEAD." 

By Rose Hartwick Thorpe. 

STANDING by the open coffin, 
Where the icy hand of death, 
Sweeping over cheek and forehead, 

Chilled the face and hushed the breath, 
We forget each hasty action, 

All the angry words they said ; 
We remember only goodness 
When we look upon the dead! 

And we sometimes think so sadly : 

" Could those closed eyes see again, 
Could that still heart only quicken 

With a throb of joy or pain, 
We would shield them from all evil." 

But, alas ! the day has fled ; 
And our tears lie, all unheeded, 

On the still face of the dead. 

Do we ever think, I wonder. 

That some struggling heart might be 
Strengthened in the path of duty 

By a smile from you or me, — 
Some despairing one grow hopeful 

Could these tears for them be shed, 
If we only gave the living 

Half the love we give the dead? 

Oh ! the erring need our pity : 

Haply, could the truth be known, 
They will bear a clearer record 

To the Father than our own. 
All these tears are unavailing, 

Though in deepest sorrow shed, 
When we keep them from the living 

Just to give them to the dead. 



214 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

IN MAY. 
By O. W. Rogers. 

FROM books, and care, and vagrant thought, 
I go to Nature's fair domain, 
To see the wonders Spring hath brought 
From peaceful death to life again. 

The grass up-springs with grateful dower 
And lines my pathway to the wood, 

Where mosses feel th' enHvening power 
Nor languish in humilitude. 

The wind-flower nods from hazel-hedge, 

The violet coy peers up at me ; 
And columbine, on yonder ledge, 

Gives a "good morrow ! " fair and free. 

Ferns, velvet-clad, awake and bring 
Their grace to shade the Hmpid pool, 

Whence tiny rills o'erflow and sing 
A welcome sweet in cadence cool. 

How fairy-like the woodland scene ! 

Each tree apparelled daintily. 
Seems conscious of its charms, I ween, 

And buds and leaves impatiently. 

The maple blushes in its blooms, 

Forecasting its October sheen ; 
The birch shakes out her tasselled plumes 

And rightful reigns the forest queen, 

How lush the meadow-grasses grow. 

And spread rich feast for meek-eyed kine ! 

The becks how joyously they flow 
And orlisten in the soft sunshine ! 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 215 

The cowslip opes its golden cup 

And mocks the sun this glorious day; 

All earth seems mounting up and up, 

And heaven seems meeting her half-way ! 

Nature's peace ! O Nature's balm ! 
My God, I thank Thee more and more 

For her sweet influence — holy, calm — 
And for her beauty's boundless store ! 

1 thank Thee for a friend at one 
With me, in love of field and wood, 

Who sees in mountain, mead, or stone, 
A token of Thy love and good, 

Though girt with man's infirmities, 
He looks through Nature unto Thee, 

And leaves the world's inanities 
To 2:0 a-field with Thee and me ! 



THE CHANGING LEAF. 
By J. W. P. 

THE forest trees are all aglow 
With ruby hues aflame ; 
Topaz and garnet high and low. 
And tinctures rare, each nook doth show, 
Which artist scarce can name. 

On Nature's pallet she hath spread 
Her pigments mixed with care; 

And o'er the woodland wastes are shed 

The radiant flora of her bed. 
With glories everywhere ! 



2l6 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

She takes what hues she liketh best 

To trace her story in ; 
Snatching her tints from rosy west, 
Or borrowing from the jewelled crest 

Where morning doth begin. 

And when the gallery is full 

Of visions none can paint ; 
With frosted brush, these works of skill, 
Are from the canvas swept at will, 
In wealth of lavishment ! 

And so with each returning year 

The picture is renewed ; 
The Master-artist doth appear, 
To garnish thus the grateful cheer 

Of autumn's bounteous eood ! 



MAY. 

By Cornelia Bogert. 

^"^HE May has come. The earthworms go 
-L To sun themselves above the ground ; 
Birds warble on the trees around. 
And brooks respond in rhythmic flow. 

We feel oppressed by sudden heat, 
The tender ferns are involute, 
The fruit-trees promise give of fruit, 

May-flowers spring up at our feet 

What though the idle frogs may croak, 
Our hearts are like the brooks, set free, 
That pour their fulness in the sea ; 

Unheeding discontented folk. 



POEMS OF MEDITATIOX. 217 

Baptized in showers through the night, 
The clovers sweet their censers swing; 
Bird-choristers are carolHng; 

The apple-trees are veiled in white. 

The willow, ironwood, and birch 

Put forth their leaves, the violets blow. 
As down the winding road we go, 

And quiet, enter in the church. 

We feel, while we are kneehng there. 
Our Confirmation vows to take. 
As though the works of God would make 

The words more earnest in our prayer. 

As if His Spirit, like a dove. 

With peace which passeth what we know, 

Would make us consecrated grow. 
To turn our thougfhts to Him above. 



THE RECLUSE. 
By O. W. Rogers. 

FAR from September's wealth of blooms, 
On mountain, moor, and lea. 
Like one who fearlessly assumes 
The privilege to be, 

A solitary aster stands 

Where flows Weelahka's stream 
By rugged rocks and woody strands, 

Ere lapsing into dream. 

Oh, not from mossy sod it rears, 

Its lissom stalk and straight. 
But from a rock where passing years 

Have left a lichened state. 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

An exile is it from the moor, 

Or from the bosky wood, 
Like one who on some siren's shore 

Ponders in mystic mood ? 

It seems to watch the waters pass 

On, on eternally, 
Like some charmed sentry whom, alas 

No comrade shall set free. 

A hermit is it, or a monk, 

In this so sweet retreat, 
Passing, in meditation smik, 

An Ave / to repeat ? 

A nun, from blest community 

Of sisters on yon hill, 
Wrapt in rare opportunity 

To gaze and dream at will ? 

It is, I trow, a flower of grace 

Keeping its vigil lone. 
Above the water's reckless race 

By its huge bowlder stone. 

Nodding in every breath of wind, 

Gleaming in sunny sheen, 
Its welcome is a welcome kind, 

Its lesson clearly seen. 

Fair queen, I love thy wild domain. 

Yet wonder when I see 
The peaceful tenure of thy reign 

On yon sterility. 

Oh, may my heart interpret free, 
When on thy realm I muse, 

The sweet content I learn of thee, 
Thou beautiful recluse ! 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 219 

CARMINA IN NOCTE. 
By the Rev. J. Anketell. 

WITH sorrow weeping, my lone watch keeping 
While all are sleeping, — 
Th e stars my light, — 
Though fond hopes perish, His love I cherish, 
Who giveth songs in the silent night. 

I muse and ponder, my thoughts still wander 
And seek Him yonder 

In glory bright. 
Forever living, my sin forgiving, 

Who giveth songs in the silent night. 

Then upward soaring, my love adoring 
Its song is pouring, 

With sweet delight, 
Where saints are praising His love amazing. 

Who giveth songs in the silent night. 

With accents tender, their praise they render 
In white-robed splendor 

On Syon's height. 
To One victorious, forever glorious, 

Who giveth songs in the silent night. 

Break, Day of glory, and tell the story 
Of ages hoary, 

And Time's long flight ; 
Though earth should perish, His love I cherish. 

Who giveth songs in the silent night. 








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POEMS OF MEDITATION. 221 

UNDER MAGDALEN TOWER: A MAY 
MEMORY^ 

By Katharine A. Mathew. 

THE springtime sunshine's gentle balm 
Falls softened in a golden haze, 
And sloping lawns of tender green 

Spread out beside the trodden ways. 
The breath and light of budding May 

Steep lawn and glade in beauty rare ; 
And round, white clouds drift on their way 
Through the soft azure of the air. 

A wind swept down the western hills 

And tossed the opening hlac blooms ; 
It swayed the nodding Guelder-rose, 

And waved the bright laburnum plumes. 
The stately chestnut's spreading shade 

Was lit with white lamps tipped with flame ; 
In leafy alleys breezes made 

A murmurous sound that went and came, — 

That went and came, and rose and fell, 

And brought upon its fragrant wings 
The echo of the Matin-bell 

That in the old tower hangs and swings, 
And flings its iron music out. 

Bidding good souls to chant and pray 
And lift the heart to the dear God, 

Who sends the sunshine and the May. 

And while the echoes faintly die 
The cloistered stillness wakes again 

To young boy-voices, clear and high, 
That chant a metrical refrain ; 

1 By the will of Henry the Seventh, of England, it was ordained that 
a Mass for the repose of his soul should be sung at five o'clock on the 
morning of the first of May, on the summit of Magdalen Tower, 0.x- 
ford, "forever." A service including the Hymnus Encharisticus is 
now yearly sung at that time and place. 



22 2 LYRICS OF THE LIVIXG CHURCH. 

And up the winding tower-stairs 

Climbs (two by two, I see them go) 
A troop of white-robed choristers. 

With fresh young faces all a-glow. 

I catch the beaming of bright eyes 

That veil as best they can their mirth 
(For hearts are light when life is May, 

And a boy's gladness is of earth). 
They pass ; the chant, the mounting feet 

Die into silence ; I, alone 
Beneath the old tree's rustling shade. 

Catch now and then a falling tone 

The cool, clear Chenvell's quiet deeps 

Reflect the elm-trees overhead. 
I\Iy thoughts sail down the long, long ways 

To old ]May-days and springs long fled. 
When the stern king, whose grief-worn heart, 

Bereft of peace, craved earnest prayer 
From Christian souls, who tenderly 

Would lift a solemn worship there. 

So the sweet music mounts, aspires. 

And echoes through the crystal air; 
And holy Eucharistic hymn 

Floats heavenward with the chanted prayer: 
The whole wide earth seems kneeling low, 

Lifting her suppliant hands to Him 
Whose glory fills the universe, 

I\Iidst echoing songs of cherubim. 

A requiem song earth's children raise 

At eve or morn, — " Lord, give us peace I " 
Give us, in mercy, quiet days; 

Let strife be hushed ; let warfare cease. 
"The peace of God," — sweet, parting words 

That close the prayer and speed us on ! 
O'er heart and mind they softly fall 

Till strife be past and victor}- won. 




MONTREUX. 



By the Rev. Frank L. Norton. 



AS one who, dreaming in the twilight gloom, 
Sees loved and lost ones, indistinct and dim. 
Friends of his younger days, who go and come 

With pleasant memories, — not spectres grim 
And ugly phantasies, but with that mien 

They wore in time when hope was young and bright, 
When faith was theirs in things not plainly seen, 

And day was theirs, nor yet had come the night, 
So, fair Montreux, within thy sheltered nooks 

I sit and dream ; while that dear form and face 
Which, in my boyhood's days, with eager looks. 

Made holiday in this enchanted place. 
Comes back again, — my sainted father's soul, — 

And holds communion sweet with me. 
As then the moonlight quivers on the vine-clad knoll ; 

As then the lake round Chillon's towers I see. 
I hear him speak of what the mountains teach : 

" They bring my soul," he says, " a holy calm, — 
h peace beyond the power of Care to reach, — 

And bathe my tired soul with restful balm. 



224 LYRICS OF THE LIVIXG CHURCH. 

When on the eternal hills my eyes have rest, 

So strong and brave, unmoved by stormy blast, 
To them, hke wearied dove unto her nest, 

]\Iyself would flee and find a home at last. 
Their path to Heaven is rough and hard to gain ; 

Their way is steep and often lost in cloud ; 
But when the heights are reached by might and main. 

WTiite robes are given with which their forms they 
shroud ; 
And round their heads, with ever growing light. 

Th' eternal Sun shines forth with welcoming ray, 
The while their earth-bound feet in dreary night 

Are stumbling in the darkness of the way. 
God's altars they within His temple spread 

With the ' fair linen ' of the \'irgin snow : 
The ripening wheat provides the Li\-ing Bread, 

And vineyards redden with Eucharistic glow ; 
While rose-hued mists, like incense-laden air, 

Rise at the vesper hour in clouds as bright 
As in cathedra] choir ascending prayer 

Is wafted upward toward the realms of light. 
God make our inmost thought as clear and white 

As the fair vestments of these altars be, — 
Purged, like the Rhone, emerging pure and bright 

From Leman"s font to join the deep blue sea ! " 



I STAND AT THE DOOR, AND KNOCK." 
By F. Macr-\e. 

HE called me to Him in my early morn, 
When, full of glee. 
I played and sang upon the grassy lawn 

Beneath the tree : 
But like a wayward colt I turned again 
Back to -my games in scorn. — I came not then. 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 225 

" Again He called me on a later day 
When years were gone, — 
When I had ceased to laugh and sing and play- 
Beneath the sun, 
When Hke ' a stricken deer I left the herd ; ' 
But oh ! I came not at that pleading word. 

' Once more He called me at the evening time 

Of my poor life, — 
He stopped and called me when my eyes were dim 

With age and strife : 
Oh ! then at last I came, and found my rest 
Within the shelter of my dear Lord's breast. 

' Yet ever does this thought disturb my dreams 
By night and day. 
Whether in busy throngs or by the woodland streams 

I take my way : 
Oh, would that I had come long years before ! — 
When first I heard that kind knock at my door." 



"TELL ME A TALE." 
By Fannie A. D. Uarden. 

TELL me a beauteous tale ; 
Tell me the story that I love the best. 
You know it, mother, — sweeter than the rest; 
'T is not a tale of fairies on the wing. 
Nor huntsmen wild that make the forest ring, 
Nor fancied image of uncanny thing, — 
Tell me a truthful tale ! 

Tell me the tale I love, — 
The same old story you so oft have told. 
Brighter than gems, and richer far than gold, - 
15 



2 26 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Of Bethlehem's Babe to whom the wise men came, 
Whom shepherds worshipped by that holy name 
Of Christ the Lord : I feel my heart aflame 
At that sweet tale of love ! 

Tell me a wondrous tale ; 
Tell me some ardent, glowing tale of truth 
To lead my spirit upward ! cried the youth. 
They tell me life is thorny, rough, and drear : 
Tell me the story of the Saviour dear, 
Who with true strength and help is ever near : 

Tell me the wondrous tale ! 

Tell us the blessed tale, 
O preacher to the longing souls of men ! 
Tell us the oft-told story o'er again. 
You need no honeyed praise to gild the word 
Which pierces hearts as with a two-edged sword ; 
The Spirit to thy speech will aid afford : 

Tell us the blessed tale ! 

Tell us the old, old tale 
Of Jesus dying for the sins of men ; 
Tell it in simple words, and oft again. 
To rich and poor, the ignorant and the wise, — 
It needs no words in rhetoric's florid guise 
To teach the heart or ope the bhnded eyes : 

Tell us the oft-told tale ! 

Tell me the precious tale, 
The old man said upon his dying bed; 
Tell me of Him who for my soul hath bled, 
Who on the cross gained victory o'er the grave, 
My Saviour Christ, whose hand is strong to save, — 
Blest story chanted over Jordan's wave, 

The immortal, deathless tale ! 



POEMS OF MEDITATION. 227 

MY PORTION FOREVER. 
By M. E. Beauchamp. 

I CANNOT live without Thee, 
O Jesus, Friend Divine ; 
I long to feel Thy Presence 
Within this heart of mine. 
Thou nearest and Thou dearest Friend, 

Without Thee earth were gloom, 
And life were but the dreary way 
To an unlighted tomb. 

I cannot live without Thee ; 

No earthly joy or love 
Can fill the heart that yearneth 

For Thee, all things above. 
In Thee alone my heart exults, 

My Love, my Joy, my All ; 
While Thou art mine no bliss can blind, 

No terrors can appall. 

I cannot live without Thee, 

O Shepherd of my soul. 
To guide me and to guard me 

And all my ways control ; 
Poor, homeless wanderer I should be 

Without the unseen Guide 
By whom my path in life is marked, 

My every want supplied. 

I cannot live without Thee; 

Thou art my breath of life, 
My strength in every hardship, 

My aid in every strife. 
Uncheered by Thee, life's loneliness 

Would be too hard to bear ; 
And heaven would be no heaven to me 

If Thou should'st not be there. 




^oem^ of Cl)iltil^ooti* 



DAISY'S EASTER GIFT. 
By Callie L. Bonney. 

DAISY sat in the family pew, 
As sweet as the Easter blossoms fair, 
A wond'ring look in the violet eyes, 
The sunshine lighting her golden hair. 

Listening intently to chant and creed. 
In tiny prayer-book keeping the place, 

Reading softly with smile of content, 
An eager look on the dimpled face. 

When, 'mid the service of prayer and song — 
Could it be ? — a purring soft and low ! 

And out of the depths of Daisy's muff. 

Walked bright-eyed kitten as white as snow. 

And when they questioned her afterward. 
The wee one answered, in accents glad, 

" You said we should bring an Easter gift, 
And that was the bestest thing I had." 



POEMS OF CHILDHOOD. 

LINES ON THE PICTURE OF A CHILD. 
By O. W. Rogers. 

DEAR child, with eyes of truth untold, 
With lightsome face and hair of gold, 
Thy picture, 'mid my books, out-gleams 
Like happy thought from sombre dreams. 

Spring sunlight on thy lips appears. 
Presaging neither doubt nor fears ; 
Hope dwelleth there, and in thine eyes 
A beauty that with April vies. 

Like modest violet in the wood, 
Uprearing in sweet solitude. 
So pure, so guileless, and bedight 
With subtle influence of delight. 

Sweet child, thy bright, unclouded face 
Looks on me with a peerless grace. 
And in this darkling winter day 
Diffuses all the sheen of May. 

Like crystal lens through it I see 
Thy sponsor's love and fealty — 
See through thine own her trustful eyes, 
And trace her path to Paradise. 

O Linda, may her grace be thine. 
Her prayers thy daily needs entwine; 
A woman's heart, a woman's will 
God give thee, shielded by His skill ! 

Oh, with thy years may graces shine, 
O'ershadowed by a grace Divine ! 
Then what is now so fair to see 
Shall fairer than the promise be ! 



231 



232 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

PATTY GRIMM. 
By Clara J- Denton. 

PRAY, have you heard of Patty Grimm ? 
A most unfortunate child is she: 
When you have heard her story through, 
I 'm sure you "11 quite agree with me. 

For Patty's eyes can only see 

The faults and flaws in everything ; 

She whines o'er this, and frets at that, 
Till peace and happiness take wing. 

Alas ! poor child, what can she do "^ 
There 's nothing right in life below. 

The sky 's too blue, or else too dark. 
And time too fast, or else too slow. 

A book 's too dull, or else too light. 

Her friends too gay, or stupid all. 
Her work too hard, her play too rough. 

Her clothes too large, or else too small. 

From day to day she plucks life's thorns 
And throws the flowers fair away, 

Alas ! alas ! she must become 
A very thorny Miss, sofne day I 

Her face has quite forgotten all 
The tender smiles of baby days : 

Her frowns — alack ! so fast they come 
Her brow is like a woody maze. 

What can we do for Patty Grimm .^ 
For this is what we sorel}- dread. 

That, should she reach sweet Heaven at last. 
She'll wish 'twas somewhere else instead. 



POEMS OF CHILDHOOD. 233 

TWO BIRTHDAYS. 
By M. E. Beauchamp. 

A FAIR-HAIRED little maiden 
Looks up with beaming eyes; 
She tells me 't is her birthday, 

With a kind of mild surprise ; 
So odd it seems to her small brain, 

She cannot well divine 
Why she was eight but yesterday, 
And now, to-day, is nine. 

Her mind is full of projects 

About her sports and toys ; 
No fear of coming evil 

Her present good alloys ; 
She only wants the tender care, 

Her parents freely give, 
And in the shelter of their love, 

Without a care can live. 

A sad-eyed, gray-haired woman 

Sits in her room alone : 
It is her birthday morning. 

And memory makes a moan. 
That three-score years have passed away, 

And taken in their train 
All hopes and joys, and left to her 

But weariness and pain. 

Ah ! lonely one, bethink thee 

Of that far birthday morn. 
When life seemed full of brightness, 

Thy path without a thorn. 
If thou again could'st freely trust 

Thy Father to provide. 
Still might'st thou, like little child, 

Without a care abide. 



234 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

A LITTLE CHILD. 
By Mrs. J. D. H. Browne. 

A TENDER bud in which enfolded lies 
Life's unexpanded flower — 
An opening dawn of endless destinies, 
A heaven-descended dower. 

Grasping love's sceptre in a tiny hand, 

All in unconscious state, 
It lies and rules, with absolute command, 

A new-born potentate ! 

Poor mortals, wearing on our tired brow 

The earthly travel-stain, 
We see this babe, pure as the driven snow, 

With joy akin to pain. 

We see our manhood and our womanhood, 

Veiled in this sweet disguise. 
Our own lost possibilities of good 

In these pure, wondering eyes. 

Ah ! little pilgrim, better be thy road, 
With less of thorns and snares. 

Than that we travelled ! lighter be thy load. 
And fewer be thy cares ! 

Yet cannot all our tender love avert 

Life's errors and its pains : 
We cannot gather out the stones that hurt, 

Nor wash away the stains ! 

Hadst Thou not said, of old, in Galilee — ■ 

Outstretching hands Divine, 
" Suffer the little ones to come to me." 

And, blessing, made them Thine ; 



POEMS OF CHILDHOOD. 

Did we not know Thee as the Guide and Friend, 

Could we not trust to Thee, 
To lead these little feet e'en to the end, 

More tenderly than we, 

Well might we fear fierce sun and chilling wind, 

And roughness of the way ! 
But Thou, O Shepherd, ever strong and kind, 

Wilt be Thy lamb's sure stay. 



235 



CHILD WISDOM. 

By J. C. S. 

" C\ MOTHER, wipe my tears away ! " 

\J I heard a little maiden say. 
Although her mother's stern surprise 
Had brought the tears to those sweet eyes. 

Dear little one ! full well she knew 
Though mother chides, she comforts too ; 
One moment she must needs reprove, 
But naught can change her tender love. 

Children of larger growth are we, 
But oft this truth we fail to see. 
That He alone can balm bestow 
Who caused the bitter tears to flow. 

Though His rebuke has made us mourn, 

Our penitence He will not scorn, 

If, like the little child, we say, 

" Dear Father, wipe our tears away ! " 



236 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

THE CHILDREN. 
By Marion Couthouy Smith. 

THEY take my ver}^ heart — I know not how — 
So shyly hfting up their deep, sweet eyes, 
Pure as the morning star in virgin skies, 
'Neath the soft hair and white, unshadowed brow. 

I would not that the darkness of the world 
Should cloud their tender light! I would instead 
That mine own eyes should weep, and o'er my head 

The wings of storm and sorrow be unfurled. 

I fain would stand before each little breast, 
A loving shield ; but since this may not be, 
I long instead that they should turn to me, 

As birds that flutter gladly to the nest, 

After the first weak flight, sure, ever sure. 

To find a mother-heart, and rest secure ! 



THE HIGHER WISDOM. 
By Frederick H. Kelsey. 



o 



With a sadness in her eye, 
As she saw the kernels scattered, 
'Neath the heavy soil to die. 

" O Papa ! " cried little Daisy, 
" Do not throw the wheat away : 

It must be wrong to waste it, 
It is good for food, you say." 



POEMS OF CHILDHOOD. 237 

Did the father cease from sowing ? 

No; he kissed her tears away; 
Bade her wait until the autumn, 

Showed her then the harvest gray. 

Thus do we, like little children, 

Raise our foolish human cries, 
When the wisdom of our Father 

Some fond hope our heart denies. 

But in God's eternal harvest 

We shall find that richest joys 
Have been won by our surrender 

Of these pleasing, earthly toys. 

So we pray in trustful accents, 

As we journey day by day, 
That His will may be accomplished 

And His wisdom point the way. 



"GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY BREAD.' 
By the Rev. Frank L. Norton, D. D. 

LITTLE white-robed, curly head, 
Kneehng down by snowy bed, 
Nightly prayers had softly said, 
Asking for his " daily bread," 
While he prayed, " Thy wdll be done 
By all dwellers 'neath the sun. 
As by those in Heaven above. 
Bound to each with bands of love.'' 
Thinking then, with knitted brow. 
Of some puzzling " why or how," 
Turning to me, gravely said : 
" Papa, tell me, why for bread 



238 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Should I ask at even prayer. 
Or for food have any care, 
When I lay me down to sleep 
Asking God my soul to keep ? 
For I say, ' Give us this day ' 
When 't is night I kneel to pray. 
Seems to me, I 'd better ask 
Help to do the morrow's task 
Than to pray for bread to eat 
'Ere another sun we greet." 
Smiled I at the puzzled brow. 
Thinking of this " why and how ; " 
Gently stroked the sunny hair 
With its golden color rare, 
Shading dreamy, thoughtful eyes. 
Catching shadows from the skies. 
" Little white-robed, curly head, 
When you ask for daily bread, 
'T is no selfish prayer you say, 
And 't is always somewhere day. 
When you pray, ' Give us this day' 
Daily bread, you mean to pray 
' Give Thy children, everywhere, 
Food in answer to my prayer.' 
When you lay you down to sleep 
Asking God your soul to keep, 
It is day in heathen lands — 
China's shores and Afric's sands 
So you ask for God to give 
Heathen children bread to live, — - 
Bread that cometh down from Heaven, 
Food that Christ Himself hath given. 
Day by day you ask this food. 
Heavenly manna, pure and good. 
Give to us this daily bread. 
Morn and eve, let it be said ; 
For 't is always somewhere day, 
And you therefore humbly pray 
For God's children everywhere, 
When you say your evening prayer." 




a^i^cellaneou^ ^oem^. 



AS WHITE AS WOOL.' 



By Alice Gray Cowan. 



"AS white as wool! " Oh, thus, my Saviour said. 

l\ " Thy sins shall be, that now as scarlet are.*' 
My Heavenly Father's word ! I bow my head; 

What can I hope for, more? What promise rare? 
Behold the flocks upon the far hill-side, 

Like knots of daisies in the tender grass. 
Through the dark vales they wander without guide : 

'Neath starry skies the summer nights they pass. 
" As white as wool ! " — as pure as helpless lambs 

That gambol on the meadow's daisied breast ; 
That follow, bleating, by the mother's side, 

Or lie upon the streamlet's brink to rest. 
My sins, though scarlet, "white as wool " shall be, 

If I but live, my Father, near to Thee ! 



240 



LYR/CS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 



A SPRING-DAY HYMN. 
By the Rt. Rev. W. E. McLaren, D. D., D. C. L. 

HOW pure the dawn, and bright ! 
A thousand songs of waking joy arise ; 
And to the zenith, flooding all the skies. 
Mounts the wide splendor of the light. 
So rise, my soul, to God. 

Filled are the curving brooks 
With hastening streams and waters running bright, 
Dancing and singing in the morning light, 

Or gliding into grassy nooks. 
So flow, my life, toward God. 

I look for flowers to bloom 
Along the margin of these streams ; the skies 
Of warmer May, with many a fond surprise 

Of violets, shall cheer my gloom. 
Thus do I hope in God. 

All Nature turns her face 
Toward the increasing sun, and prays the fire 
That kindles life and bids the buds conspire 

To clothe the earth with forms of grace. 
Thus I aspire to God. 

The day wanes to its close. 
The drowsy herd turns homeward, and the wing 
Of every bird is folded ; vespers ring, 

And weary hearts seek soft repose. 
So rest, my heart ! in God. 



242 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

A SONNET. 

By N. F. 

I BROKE my lute, and said that I no more 
Would sing, — hopes wrecked, joys past, and 
present pain, 
And life not worth the living; all was vain, 

But to sit still and wait upon the shore, 

Whence every moment sadly launches o'er 
The vast, unfathomable, trackless main, 
And never back returns, the ghostly train 

Of those I love, and shall for aye deplore. 

My food was bitter, and the world a jest ; 
And yet anon a voice spake in my ear ; 

" O son of man " — and broke my slothful rest — 

" O son of man," it said, " what dost thou here ? 
To labor, though no fruit appear, were best. 

Nor idle to be found when, lo ! thy judge is near.' 



BY THE SEA. 
By the Rev. J. H. Knowles. 

FAR off, the rocks point out to sea. 
With steadfast, true, unswerving hand 
The winds may blow, the waves may dash, 

But ever constant, there they stand. 
A symbol this, O God, that we 
Should ever fix our thoughts on Thee. 

They stand 'mid tumult of the storm. 
They stand when lisping waves caress ; 

In sunshine, rain-mist, or deep shade. 
They show no sign of weariness. 

A symbol this, of trustful rest. 

That what God sends is always best. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS, 243 

HEROISM ON THE SEA. 
By Maria Batterhajm Lindsey. 

IT was to the shore of a boisterous sea, 
Tossing and heavmg in terrible glee, 
Through the rough waves' lash and the wild winds' play 
That a brave ship drove one winter's day. 

She struck on the shoal of St. George's strand, 
In sight and almost within hail of land, 
And the waves washed over the vessel's side. 
When an anchored boat her distress descried. 

The ship was fast, and the sea ran high, 

And the cruel wind went screaming by, — 

It tore her shrouds and tattered her sail. 

As she bent to her doom in the teeth of the gale. ■ 

Half-mast hung the flag; and that other boat 
Launched a small craft out on the waves afloat; 
They watched the brave deed from the doomed ship there, 
While over the sea rose a hope and a prayer, — 

When, sudden as thought, the flag was gone ! 
Still the rescuers' boat toiled bravely on ; 
'T was madness to dare it, but hearts were brave, 
With fellow-men prey to the merciless wave. 

And so, through the fury that lashed the strand, 
The little boat pressed with persistence grand ; 
Ere the wreck went down they had saved the men, 
And they questioned about the signal then. 

" Why did you put your flag out of sight ? " 

And the captain answered : " 'T was madness quite 

For you to attempt a rescue here ; 

We had no boats, and the end was near. 



244 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

'• We smothered our hopes ; 't was a pity, we knew, 
When we were drowning, to sacrifice you. 
So we lowered our flag from its station high, 
That you might be saved, though we must die." 



DIES IR.^. 
Translated by the Rev. J. Anketell. 

SEE, it dawns, that day of burning, 
Oft by king and prophet told ; 
This fair earth to ashes turning. 
Flaming heavens together rolled, 
While the glittering 
Banners of the Cross unfold ! 

Ah ! what terror is impending, 

When the Judge of man descends, 

Strictly to our deeds attending, 
Every secret veil he rends, 
And the sinner 

To His rod of justice bends. 

Hark ! the trumpet's wondrous swelling 
Calls Death's captives from the ground. 

Every dark sepulchral dwelling 
Echoes to its awful sound, 
And the legions 

Of the dead, God's throne surround. 

Death, amazed with sudden terror. 
Opens wide the mighty tomb ; 

Nature, owning human error, 
Hides her pallid face in gloom ; 
Man, the creature, 

Rises to receive his doom. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 245 

Then a book of fiery pages 

Flashes on our startled eyes ; 
All the sins of bygone ages 

Shall a guilty world surprise ; 
While for refuge 
All in vain the sinner cries. 

When the Judge, from heaven descending, 
Mounts His crystal throne on high, 

All His marshalled hosts attending. 
Flaming legions of the sky, 
Nothing hidden 

Shall escape His searching eye. 

What shall I, frail man, be pleading? 

How from sin's sad doom be freed ? 
To what patron interceding, 

Begging him my cause to plead, 
When the righteous 
God's free grace for safety need ? 

King of majesty and glory. 

Who dost free salvation give, 
Listen to Redemption's story, 

Bid Thy erring children live ! 
Fount of Pity, 
Save me, and my sins forgive ! 

Holy Jesu, with compassion 

Think upon Thine earthly way, 
How I caused Thy bitter Passion 

When in sin I went astray. 
Blessed Saviour, 
Leave me not in that dread day. 

Weak and weary Thou hast sought me, 

Lost to God and dead to Thee : 
With Thy Blood and Passion bought me. 

Hanging on th' accursed tree ; 
Let such labor 
Not in vain be spent on me. 



246 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Righteous Judge of retribution, 
Who my guilt and woe didst bear, 

Grant Thy gift of absolution 
To a trembHng sinner's prayer ; 
Lest I perish 

In that hour of dark despair. 

As a guilty culprit, groaning, 
Low I bend before Thy Throne, 

Blushing, my transgressions owning — 
Sins for which Thou didst atone. 
Spare Thy suppliant ; 

Lord, I cling to Thee alone ! 

Thou, who Mary gav'st remission, 

When with tears she bathed Thy feet, 

Heard'st the dying thief's petition 
On the cross, Thy mercy-seat, — 
Hope hast given 

That my pardon is complete. 

Though my prayers are void of merit, 
Thy blest love can never tire ; 

Let my soul in Thee inherit 

All Thy ransomed saints desire ; 
Save in mercy 

From a doom of endless fire. 

With Thy sheep a place provide me, 

Pastured in eternal light ; 
From the guilty goats divide me, 

Banished from Thy blissful sight : 
On Thy right hand 
Set me, clad in robes of white. 

When with tears of bitter anguish 
To their doom the lost descend, 

In eternal flames to languish. 

In a death that knows no end, — 
With the holy 

Bid me to Thy joys ascend. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 247 

Low in prayer I bow before Thee, 

Prostrate in the very dust, 
With a contrite heart implore Thee 

For a portion with the just ; 
In my death-pangs 

Let Tliy mercy be my trust. 

On that day of tears and terror 

Man, arising from his clay, 
Stands accused of sin and error. 

Guilty, trembling with dismay. 
Holy Jesu 
Save him in that awful day ! 



UNFINISHED. 
By E. a. Clarke. 

I WORKED at the task the Master 
Had set me at early morn. 
When the earth lay fresh and glowing 
In the radiant light of dawn. 

My hopes were fresh as the dewdrops, 
My heart as bright as the sun ; 

I sang as I worked, and pictured 
The joy of a task well done. 

But the day wore on, and the dewdrops 
Were kissed by the sun away ; 

On my lips the song grew fainter 
I had chanted at break of day. 

But the work was still the Master's, 

So I toiled with loving care 
Though my hands grew weak and w^eary 

And my song became a prayer. 



248 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Then suddenly all around me 
A glad shout rings on high ; 

My comrade's task is completed ! 
Can I join in the joyous cry ? 

I look at mine unfinished, 

I glance at the setting sun, — 

Perhaps 't is an angel whispers, 

" 'T is the Master's work that is done." 

So I blend my voice in the anthem 
Of praise for the work complete, 

As "tis bought with reverent footsteps 
To lay at the Master's feet. 

Then I turn alone in the shadows 
To work while the daylight last ; 

Did I fancy, or was it truly 
An angel that flitted past ? 

" Grieve not at thy work unfinished," 
He whispered ; " the Lord loves best, 

The gift of a will submissive. 
And a heart in His love at rest.'' 



VISIONS IN OAK HILL CEMETERY 
By F. Burge Griswold. 



B 



ROWN leaves upon the old oak. trees, 
Melodious in the gentle breeze; 



Snowdrops, with meek inclining heads 
Beside the lowly, silent beds ; 

The yellow dandelion, king 

Of all the early flowers of spring : 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 249 

The crocus, with its petals bright, 
Purple, and gold, and purest white ; 

The shadow of a bird, that flies 
Up toward the realms of Paradise ; 

Bees, sipping from the blossoms spread 
In sweet remembrance o'er the dead : 

The marble monuments that keep 
Their record while our dear ones sleep ; 

The circling hills, the bending sky. 
With benediction from on high, — 

Such are the memories that embrace 
That quiet, hallowed resting-place. 



HEAVEN. 
By the Rev. Cameron Mann. 

" T)RESS on to Heaven!" — so goes the common 

-L speech — 

" Cast loose from these foul noisy quays, and sail 
For happy islands far beyond the reach 

Of this deceptive present, dark and stale." 
Vain thoughts ! that eyes which see naught here shall hail 
A joyous light on some untrodden beach ; 
And what familiar voices could not teach 

In stately song of seraphs shall prevail. 

The heavenly sunbeams on earth's highways fall. 
The blessed angels move through worldly din. 

Not over seas but in the streets they call, 
At every step we meet celestial kin. 

In sacramental parts is shown the All ; 

The gate to God stands open here, — press in ! 



250 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

RACINE REVISITED. 
By the Rev. J. H. Knowles. 

AH ! my dear DeKoven, slumber, 
Slumber 'neath thy granite cross 
Sleep in peace ! though we may never 
Cease to mourn thy bitter loss. 

Sad it is to miss thy loved smile 
Welcoming our pilgrim feet, 

Sad to know that we shall never 
Hear on earth thy accents sweet. 



But the thought comes still to cheer us 
That thy work is being done, 

That the spirit of the Master 
Rules from rise till set of sun. 



In the silent grave thy body 
Lies beneath the carven stone. 

But the sound of prayer and praises 
Echoes near with ceaseless tone. 

In the place of the departed 
Rests in peace thy happy soul, 

Waiting there, with prayerful spirit, 
For the Church's glorious goal. 

Here on earth, before the altar 
Which thy saintly hands did rear. 

In sweet union with thy soul's quest 
Rises still the voice of prayer. 

Still at early hour that altar 
Is aglow with lights that shed 

Beams of peace on those who offer 
Day by day the Mystic Bread. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 25 I 

Still the daily round of Matins 

Bright with all its surpliced throng, 

Still the noonday Intercessions 
Lead i>s on to Evensong. 

Still the sweet voice of the Warden 
Breathes o'er all the word of peace; 

Ah ! how good to know that God's work 
Never, never here shall cease. 

Dear DeKoven, sweetly slumber. 

Slumber 'neath thy granite cross, 
Sleep in peace ! for time hath tempered 

Thy mysterious, long felt loss. 



GORDON. 
By R. H. G. O. 



ENGLAND ! thy days of glory are not o'er — 
For sure a nobler hero ne'er drew breath 
Than dauntless Gordon, — -in his life and death 
Right worthy of the chivalry of yore. 
No man he feared; but striding vanward, bore 
God's banner on with an unflinching faith ; 
As though he heard with heaven-tuned ear, 
" Thus saith the Lord ; " and hearing, cared for nothing 
more. 

His memory is a trumpet, echoing down 
Into the deepest caverns of the heart. 
Where like a graven image Self is shrined ; 
Oh, weave for his dear head no funeral crown ; 
Drop but one tear, and turning to depart, 
Seek thou to be hke him in soul and mind. 



252 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

"ST." AND "D. D." 
By the Author of "The Most Named Church." 

ONE Joseph Parker wrote a book, 
A famous book wrote he ; 
And on the titlepage he put 
That he was a " D. D." 

Of o;reat and worthy men he wrote — 
Of James and John and Paul, 

But who they were, from any mark, 
You could not guess at all. 

If James and John and Paul may not 
As " Saints " be known to fame, 

Why does this Joseph Parker add 
" D. D." to his own name ? 



MORNING. 
By Thomas Mair. 

TIS early morn ! each trembHng, dewy spray 
With radiant beauty glows within the light 
That streams in splendor from the rising sun 
'Gainst the dark background of departing night. 

O'er the broad bosom of the sparkhng sea 

The foam-crowned billows haste to greet the shore, 

With low-breathed murmurs of the lapping tide, 
That speak of peace and joy forevermore. 

Thro' the dark wood and o'er the sunht plain. 

The feathered songsters pour their hymn of praise ; 

While gentle breezes, wandering thro' the grove, 
Join the sweet anthem that their voices raise. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 253 

Earth in her beauty draws so near to heaven, 
We seem to dwell within its blessed peace ; 

"When in our hearts all pain and grief depart, 
And God has bid the mourner's tear to cease. 

Will such a morning break upon my soul, 

When God shall call my spirit from earth's night, 

To dwell forever in a deeper gloom 

Or wake to endless glory in His sight ? 

His will be done ! But when life's path grows dark, 
When doubt and trial rest upon my way. 

E'en in the gloom I hear my Saviour's voice 

And know His hand will guide me when I stray. 

So in His love I wait, wnth trusting heart. 
To see the shadows break and flee away, 

When in the sunshine of His gracious smile 
My night shall vanish in eternal day. 



EVENING. 
By Thomas Mair. 

HOW calm the wooded hills repose 
Beneath the softened hght. 
Reflected from the glowing clouds 
That mark Aurora's flight. 

The radiant masses, piled on high, 
With wondrous beauty gleam. 

As if already on their brows 
Heaven's opening glories beam. 

No sound the holy stillness breaks, 
Save when the murmuring pine 

Utters its anthem in the breeze, 
To nature's Lord divine. 



254 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

In such an hour my spirit turns 
From all its worldly care, 

And feels within its longing soul 
God's holy presence there. 

My listening ears can almost catch 
The hymn of Heaven's bright choir; 

My eyes, that pierce the radiant blue, 
Reflect my heart's desire. 

When will the cords that bind to earth 
Break, and my spirit free ! 

O Lord, 't is weary waiting here, 
I long for Heaven and Thee. 



GOLDEN-ROD. 
By the Rev. Hobart B. Whitney 



o 



N the river bank reclining, 



Where no noisy footsteps trod, 
Thoughts and cares of life resigning, 
There we gathered golden-rod. 

There no sounds of toil were straying. 
There no laborers strive and plod ; 

But of merry children playing. 
Where we gathered golden-rod. 

Woodland scents were soft distilling, 
Breathing from the fragrant sod ; 

Woodland sounds the air were filling. 
Where we gathered golden-rod. 

In the zephyrs — going — coming — 
There the wood-weeds sway and nod ; 

Drowsy bees were softly humming, 
Where we gathered golden-rod. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 255 

And the autumn seeds were scattering, 

Showering from the bursting pod ; 
And the trembling leaves were chattering 



Through the trees the sun-rays sifting 
Danced like fairies golden-shod ; 

Golden clouds above were drifting, 
Where we gathered golden-rod. 



And the river, calmly flowing, 
Seemed the benison of God; 

Gate of Heaven, — the sunset glowing, 
Where we gathered golden-rod ! 



THE MESSAGE OF LOVE. 
By H. p. Huse. 

I HAD a message sent to me once 
From a country over the sea. 
So sweet, so strange, that I could not guess 

Who sent that message to me. 
They said that it came from Christ the Lord 

Who lived in Galilee; 
And all that He said was, " Love," still love ; 
And so was His message to me. 

" Love ye one another," — thus it came 

From that Holy Land over the sea, — 
" So men shall know that ye are mine. 

For loving them ye love me." 
And " Even as I love you, love them," 

Was the message to you and to me ; 
Do you think we try to live these words 

That were spoken in Galilee ? 



256 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 




THE SONG OF SPRING. 

^ By J. W. P. 

COME with garlands fresh and fair, 

To wreathe the gladsome year ; 
To sound a watchword through the 
land : 



Brothers, be of good cheer 



I come to chase the gloom away 

Of sterile winter's hand : 
To scatter brightness as the day 

O'er ever}' vernal land. 

I come to visit earth again. 

With sunshine and with shower; 

Imparting to the faithful soil 
The secret of my power. 

I come to play a wizard's part 
With birds and beasts and flowers, 

To thrill dead nature into life. 
And wake her dormant powers. 



I come to pour my odors forth 

Upon the zephyr wind ; 
And paint my colors, rich and rare, 

On every flower I find. 

I come to fill the woods and groves 

With music ever true, 
And teach the great cathedral choir 

Their anthems to renew. 

I come to move the finny tribe 

To sportive gambols free. 
Making the bright and sparkling brook 

To dance with ecstasy. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 257 

I come to lighten human woe, 

The sufferer to ease, 
To kiss the cheek and make it glow 

With health and joy and peace. 



I come that charter to renew, 

Of ages long ago, — 
" Seed time and harvest, cold and heat, 

No more shall earth forego." 

I come to cheer the fainting soul, 

By my perennial youth. 
With visions of a spring to come — 

A resurrection truth. 

I come to teach the sons of men 

A faithful Father's love, 
And lead them in true thankfulness 

To raise their hearts above. 



A NOBLE RIDE. 
By L. 

AD OWN the hill he rode : 
Not for his noble blood 
Shall he be known ; 
Not for an ancient name. 
Shall his undying fame 
Be proudly sung. 

Into the town he rode ; 
On came the mighty flood, 

As he rode on. 
" Run to the hills ! " he cried : 
" Turn to the mountain side ! 

My brothers, run ! " 
17 



258 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Through street and lane with speed. 
He dashed his frantic steed ; 

His cry rang out : 
" Run to the hills ! " They turned 
To see if he were mad, then learned 

The meanins: of that shout. 



The mighty flood came on 1 
Rider and horse went down. 

Their work at end. 
The flood swept cruelly by, 
A bitter, wailing cry 

The people send. 

Too late they understand 
The rider's brief command : 

" Run to the hills ! " 
But he had done his best. 
God grant him peace and rest, 

Beyond all ills. 



"VAIN IS THE HELP OF MAN. 
By Rica H. Finlay. 

OTHER friends may come and go ; 
Thou shalt fail me never ; 
On Thy faithful, tender love, 
May I lean forever. 

Never shall I ask in vain ; 

Thou art ever willing 
To fulfil my soul's request, 

All its trouble stilling. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 259 

Earthly friend can never meet 

All my heart's deep yearning ; 
To a Love omnipotent 

It is ever turning. 

As the flower turns to the sun, 

Source of all its beauty ; 
So my spirit ever yields 

To the Lord her duty. 

Mortal cannot Hve without 

Homage to his Maker, — 
Of all joys and hopes of men 

Giver and Partaker. 

Vain it is to seek on earth 

Lasting peace or gladness ; 
All its joys, and all its hopes 

Only end in sadness. 

Let our aching, yearning hearts 

Raise their longing higher, 
And to purer, better joys 

Let our souls aspire, — 

Seek to live at peace with God, 

Seek to lay up treasure 
Where our souls at last shall find 

Joy that hath no measure. 



THE UNREAL AND THE REAL. 
By the Rev. Geo. M. Everhart, D. D. 

IN the hills from my window fair Pisgah is seen, 
The Queen of the mountains, in beauty and sheen 
'T is said she is robed by Distance, her maid, 
In vesture of blue 'neath the light and the shade. 



26o LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Enchanting, the mountains are ever the same, 
With Distance to robe them, with fancy aflame ; 
But disrobe them of azure, come near to their breast, 
And alas ! riven rocks, torn Kmbs, from their crest, 
Ravines in their sides and dead wood from their trees. 
And wild brush, and rents, and all else you may please. 
Disclose the old mountain to be but a fraud — 
A monster at home, an angel abroad. 

The beauty of form and the colors of light 
That symbolize life in its sensuous delight, 
Are parts of the world — the butterfly glow — 
They enchain us awhile till we grasp them and know 
That skeleton forms of sorrows within. 
And all the array of earth's troubles and sin 
Make life as it is — make life in the real, 
Unmasking the false, the true to reveal. 

But there are mountains beyond, green hills far away, 
Where the vesture is golden or azure by day. 
The shadows of twilight but soften the scene, 
The clouds never burst, yet the hillsides are green. 
Adown over sands as white as the snow. 
Leaps onward the fountain with rhythmical flow; 
The velvet-like grass and the beautiful flower 
Make the near and the far of magnetical power. 

And is it not true that in life may be found 

The noble and good in whom truth may abound ? 

That the glitter of fraud does in no way prevail 

To blind them with folly, their spirits assail. 

But that near to such souls are the virtues of heaven. 

And to God, as their All, their whole life has been given ? 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 261 

A HYMN. 
By Mary C. Preston. 

HOW long, O Lord, how long? 
The glory and the song 
That shone and sounded at Thy birth 
Grow dim and faint throughout the fainting earth \ 
And heavily falls the doom of death. 
And all our hope still tarrieth. 

How long, O Lord, how long ? 

The weary ages throng 

With wail of birth and wail of dying ; 

The prayers of ages wait replying ; 

Time holds his throne, the graves still keep 

Their dead, and still the living weep. 

How long, O Lord, how long ? 

Arise, O Great and Strong, 

And quit at last the heavenly places. 

Begirt with glory-clouds and angel faces, 

Break through the spaces of the golden stars. 

And loose eternally our prison bars ! 



LINES TO A CHALICE TWICE RESCUED 
FROM THE FLAMES. 

By the Rev. F. W. Taylor, S. T. D. 

BLEST token of the dying love of Christ ! 
Dear symbol of His awful sacrifice ! 
Pledge of His conflict in Gethesemane \ 
Chalice of blessing, filled from Jesu's side ! 
Thy charmed existence tells the faithful tale, 
That he who searcheth for the Holy Grail, 



262 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

And marks his pathway by the mystic hght 

That gently falls upon his anxious sight, 

INIust tread "mid flames consuming, fierce, and wild, 

As pure and single-hearted as a child : 

Must haste to midnight risk, when praise has ceased, 

As watchful as the consecrated priest. 

They bear to fainting men 

The Cup of Life again. 

When fier}' wrath and death 

Encompass all beneath, — 
They, most like children, most hke priests of God, 
Who scathless 'midst the world's dread hres have trod. 



IMPRISONED. 
Bv L. L. Robinson. 

SHUT in ? Ah. no I we call not them shut in 
Whose busy hearts with folded hands must lie, 
Hearing afar the world's low, muffled din, 

Or hushed at night on tip-toe passing by ; 
Ah, no ! such souls are free to soar afar, 
While they who near them watch oft prisoned are. 

Shut in.-^ Ah, no 1 not they whose yearning gaze 
Meets only mighty hills on ever}- side, 

That softly veil within their silver)' haze 

The world, whose visage sad 't were well to hide : 

Ah, no ! souls thus shut in scale heights unknown 

To many a crown upon an earthly throne. 

Then who are they whom we should call shut in ? 

They only who within the hardened shell 
Of j-^^fast prisoned are ; who, looking in, 

Or out, or up, see naught but their own cell ; 
Whose highest aim self's highest greed to win. — 
These are the souls whom we should call shut in. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 26; 

FAITH AND WORKS. 
By Brooks O. Baker. 

TWO persons met each Sunday morn 
To cross the river Tay, 
Where each his own opinion taught 

In a dogmatic way. 
The ferryman, a knowing Scot, 

Each Sunday heard them say 
No mortal man could e'er be saved, 

Outside a certain way. 
One said 't was faith, and faith alone. 

Could ever save a man, 
And every one will be condemned 

Who tries another plan. 
The other held it was by works. 

That faith alone was dead, 
That works would save the righteous man, — 

" Good works will save," he said. 
On Sunday morn, when half way o'er. 

The ferry-boat went round. 
And though it went quite rapidly, 

It got no nearer ground. 
"Put out the other oar," one said : 

The boatman did obey. 
But still no progress did they make — 

They went the other way. 
Then the divines were sore annoyed 

To see the trick he played : 
" Work both together," they command ; 

The boatman then obeyed. 
On went the boat, and quickly too. 

As if 't were in a race, 
And safely brought the worthy crew 

Unto their landing-place. 
"Well, gentlemen," the boatman said, 

"What have I done this morn .'^ " 



264 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

" You 've wasted time in turning round ! ' 

They answered him with scorn. 
'• Just look ! " the wily Scotchman said, 

" The name 's upon each oar. 
Whene'er I pulled with Faith or Works, 

We got no nearer shore ; 
'T was only when I worked the two 

The boat had any go ; 
And you will find that Faith and Works 

Must pull together so." 



THE SISTER. 
By the Rev. F. W. Taylor, S. T. D. 

A LIFE of peace, all calm within : without, 
All active duty ; love's pure service given ; 
A faith so warm no chilling winds of doubt 

Can bar with clouds her intercourse with Heaven. 

A life of prayer, thus love breathes forth, to Love 
Divine and boundless, every deep desire ; 

And each rapt soul, enkindled from above, 
Mingles her incense with Heaven's altar fire. 

And still more precious fruit of Cavalry's Tree 
Is garnered in Heaven's storehouse by her King ; 

Better than costliest sacrifice, the free 

Obedience Christ's hallowed Bride doth bring. 

O Blessed Jesu ! teach Thy doubting Church 
How rich the grace Thou hast on her bestowed. 

Bid her faint heart take courage, and the torch 
Of Love re-lit to clasp, and praise her God. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 265 

THE TOKEN. 
By the Rev. William Francis Dickenson, M.D. 

[At the Consecration of Bishop Potter in Grace Church, New York, 
just after the laying on of hands, a ray of sunlight shone through the 
storm then prevailing.] 

THE services began in tempest loud, 
And deluges of rain which swept the streets ; 
The heavens were wrapped in sombre-mantled cloud. 
Against the windows dashed the bleak stormbeats. 

The organ prelude rolled its thunders sweet 

While robed processions moved along the aisle, — 

Elders, Apostles, who with peace-shod feet 
Had grathered here in orreetine for awhile 



Of him, elect Apostle, now so soon 

To stand with Christ's commission given, 

In all the fulness of his hfe's rich noon, 

" A legfate of the skies " — an officer of Heaven. 



There were Christ's ministers from far and wide ; 

Among the wisest, noblest, and the best. 
From the far East, from Rocky Mountains' side — 

The fair Southland, the prairies of the West. 

The solemn services were finished now. 
Which led up to the final, crowning act — 

" The laying on of hands." Then came the vow : 
" A shepherd of the flock, the faith intact, 



" I promise faithfully to be — to keep ; 

In tenderness and love to wield the rod, 
Remembering all Christ's poor, weak, straying sheep 

Not done alone, but with the help of God." 



266 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

The mitred leaders, as the questions ceased, 
In solemn readiness there waiting stood, 

And spake the words by which the kneeling priest 
Should rise a bishop in the Church of God. 

•• We lay our hands in delegated power 
Upon thy head. Now in the saintly line 

Henceforth and ever from this solemn hour, 
A bishop's oversight and work are thine. 

" Nor let this sacred charge from thee depart ; 

O Watchman. Leader, faithful at thy post ! 
Ever God's gift keep glowing in thy heart, 

And for this work, ' Receive the Holy Ghost." " 

The words were ended, when, behold, a wave 
Of sunlight ^mid the storm came floating down 

Through the rich panes, and lit the hallowed nave, 
As if in storm and shine were mingled cross and crown. 



Mark this glad tpken, herald ^f the cross ! 

Shine forth in splendor through life's gloom and sin ! 
Amid its cloud and storm, its pain and loss. 

Thou mitred Leader, stand, in heaven's own sheen ! 



THE SISTER'S VOW. 

LINES ADDRESSED TO A MOTHER SUPERIOR. 

By a. 

DEAR, gentle eyes in which I see 
A reflex of the Love divine ! 
Dear, steadfast hand that boldest me ! 
And dear, calm heart that strengthenest mine ! 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 267 

O Mother ! 't is an easy task 
To thee my threefold vow to make ; 
Here let me kneel, and, fervent, ask 
To keep it for a Bearer's sake. 

Weary at last of wandering, 

Now will I rest, and count it sweet 

My hands, and head, and heart to bring, 

And lay them at the Master's Feet. 

O Mother ! take forevermore 
This wayward will that would not break. 
This passionate love that would not soar, 
And guide, and raise, for Jesu's sake ! 



STILL RING THE BELLS. 
By H. C. McKeever. 

IN pride of human reason, 
Men scale the lofty sky, 
And with a sacrilegious hand 

The God of heaven defy; 
Would dig, and analyze, and sift 

Each little grain of dust. 
Till baffled, 'gainst an iron wall 
Of darkness, bow they must. 
AndjK^/ the spires point up to heaven. 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

Out of the caverns cold and drear 
Crowds of dark spirits creep, 

Quenching the star of Christian hope 
In death's eternal sleep, 



268 LYRICS OP THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Casting a pall of darkest gloom 

O'er man's mysterious fate, 
Beating against the iron bars 
With frantic blows of hate. 
AxiA yet the spires point up to heaven. 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

Spreading the fogs of unbelief 

O'er weak and trembhng hearts, 
Dimming the starry light of truth, 

Piercing w^ith cruel darts 
The humble souls that look to heaven 

For light, and joy, and peace. 
Tearing away the feeble hope 
That longs for sweet release. 
And_y^/ the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

What will they do with Jesus Christ, 

Who with majestic tread 
Ts walking through the centuries. 

Heaven shining overhead ? 
■• Lo ! I am with you to the end." 

Has every cavil still'd, — 
The power of every precious word 

Still day by day fulfill'd. 
And_y^/ the spires point up to heaven. 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

For eighteen hundred rolling years, 

Through seas of blood and strife, 
While earthly kingdoms wax and wane, 

The Lord of endless life 
Is marching on to take His throne, 

To conquer all his foes : 
To crown his saints with victor}-, 

To heal His people's woes. 
Kvi^yet the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 269 

Up from the depth of Christian hearts 

There comes the voice of faith ; 
Heaven-sent, heaven-kept, it answers back. 

For "thus my Master saith." 
Doubters may fling their scornful sneers, 

'^^ feel that Christ is near ; 
Down in the castle of the heart. 

We k7iow that He is here. 
Andi yet the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

Here, in the grand cathedral choir, 

Here, in the lowly fane, 
Where God's dear children worship Him 

In love's most raptured strain ; 
Here, in the countless homes of rest, 

For weary ones of earth, — 
For all the sheltering arms of love 

From Him must date their birth. 
A\\6.yet the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

Here, in the witnesses for Him, — 

The homes for lame and blind, 
The orphan and the Magdalen, 

All sorts of humankind ; 
In feeble copies of our Lord, 

In voices sweet and clear, 
His people witness to the truth 

That Jesus Christ is here. 
And yet the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

No wonder that the hosts of hell 

Are rallying to the fight ; 
When through the twilight of the past. 

Beyond the dreary night. 
We see the rosy dawn of day 

Above the eastern seas, — 



270 LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 

Light from the Orient ! Life from death ! 

Come wafted on the breeze. 
And j^/ the spires point up to heaven, 



You cannot still these Gospel bells, 

Nor tear the temple down ; 
You cannot crush these lofty spires, 

Nor trample Jesus' crown. 
For on, and on, the bells will ring. 

Till nations from afar 
Shall echo back the blessed chimes 
That hail the " Morning Star." 
Kndiyet the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 

The bells of the Nativity 

Proclaim that He is here : 
The tables spread with Jesus' love 

Our waiting spirits cheer, — 
Waiting throughout the centuries 

For Christ to claim His own. 
When in His glorious majest}'. 
He takes His righteous throne. 
Andj^/ the spires point up to heaven, 
And still the bells ring grandly on. 



MY CABIN. 

By Elsie White Gaynor. 

THE winter's wind is blowing chill, 
It seeks an entrance at door and sill. 
But my well-built cabin 
And hearth aglow 
Are sure defence from any foe. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 271 

The world, they say, is full of strife, 

Yet mine is a quiet and peaceful hfe, 

For my well-built cabin 

And hearth aglow 

Are faithfullest of friends, I trov/. 



The world is full of anxious care 

For goods and gold I do not share, 

For my well-built cabin 

And hearth aglow 

Are all I need and all I know. 

And the world is full of bitter loss, 

Where men count store their worthless dross, 

But my well-built cabin 

And hearth aglow 

A portion are that brings no woe. 

Could the world but taste of a humbler life, 

Forget its pomp and ambitious strife. 

My well-built cabin 

And hearth aglow 

And their quiet, peace, and comfort know ! 

But the world will scoff at my simple pride. 

My humbler pleasures it will deride ; 

And my well-built cabin 

And hearth aglow 

And the joys they bring it will never know. 




SUNSET THOUGHTS. 



By Josephine Smith Wood. 



THE western glow of amber bright, 
Floods all the land with golden light 
A fleecy cloud, just tinged with red, 
Like burnished fret-work hangs o'erhead. 



The gorgeous sky in sunset drest 
Is mirrored on the calm sea's breast ; 
A far-off gleaming sail doth lend 
Its beauty to the day's sweet end. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 273 

Naught now is heard save muffled roar 
Of restless wave-beat on the shore ; 
And musing thoughts within me rise, 
That fill with tears my grateful eyes. 

The heavenly country seems to me 
To lie beyond that sunlit sea ; 
These waters, stilled at His command. 
Are " in the hollow of His hand." 

Thy way, O Lord, permits no flaw. 
The best comes last — such is Thy law. 
The fairest sky lies in the west ; 
'T is at the close of day we rest. 

The dying year doth earth enfold. 
With scarlet robe and cloth of gold : 
And lengthened shadows softest seem, 
When twilight silvers all the stream. 

So time the sharp edge roundeth o'er, 
Which hurt us once and wounded sore ; 
Its mellow light doth faults obscure — 
Were it not so, who could endure ! 



Like this fair day I find complete, 
I know life's close shall be as sweet ; 
For light will be its eventide, 
With heavenly portals opening wide. 

And when for me life's day is past. 
May my expectant soul, at last. 
Bathe in the golden light, outpoured 
From that fair city of our Lord. 

The sunset fades, but morn comes fair 
The dead year doth a Spring prepare ; 
And so my soul, from its dead clay, 
Shall waken, satisfied, some day. 
18 



274 



LYRICS OF THE LIVING CHURCH. 




PSALM XXIII. 
By the Rev. John Milton Peck. 

THE Lord, my God, in pastures green, 
In fertile fields He placeth me ; 
My Shepherd King, by brooklet sheen. 
Without a lack. He feedeth me. 

And when my soul hath gone astray, 
Then to the right He turneth me ; 

And ever in the righteous way, 

Oh, bless His Name ! He leadeth me. 

Yea, e'en when death's dark shadows come, 
I '11 know no fear — He holdeth me ; 

His presence then shall bear me home, 
His rod and staff shall comfort me. 



And with a ready table spread, 
Against my foes He shieldeth me 

With holy oil upon my head. 
And cup of joy. He filleth me. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 



275 



Goodness and mercy all my days, 
From my dear Lord, shall follow me ; 

And in His house, with ceaseless praise, 
I '11 dwell, — my God, He knoweth me. 




Tittle Marjorie^s Love Story. 

By Marguerite Bouvet, Author of '' Sweet 
William." Fully illustrated by Helen Maitland Arm- 
strong. SmalUto, $1.25. 

Miss Bouvet's popularity as a writer for the young was 
at once established on the publication of her first and very 
successful book, " Sweet William." Her 
new book, "Little Marjorie's Love Story," 
cannot fail to be equally popular. The un- 
selfish love of plain, timid Little Marjorie 
for her beautiful, gifted, imperious bro- 
ther, and his denial of her when at the 
zenith of his career, at a time when he 
was carrying peace and comfort to the 
souls of hundreds by the angel-like sweet- 
ness of his voice, is told with that charm 
which Miss Bouvet possesses in such a 
.singular degree. The beauty and pathos 
of the story are touching, and the delicate 
way in which the characteristics of the 
one child are contrasted with those of 
the other is as effective as the lights and 
shadows of a picture. Pride and selfish- 
ness never seemed more contemptible 
than in the person of the handsome 
Gerald, nor unselfish love and self-sacrificing sisterly devotion 
more beautiful than in that of sweet little Marjorie. The 
illustrator, Miss Armstrong, has told the story in picture as 
effectively as the author has in words. 




Sold by all booksellers, or mailed., on receipt of price, by 

^A, C McCLURG AND CO., Publishers, 

Cor. Wabash Ave. and Madison St., Chicago. 



Sweet William. 

By Marguerite Bouvet. With Illustrations 
by Helen and Margaret /^^^^ Armstrong". 
Small quarto, 209 pages, .^^ ^^^^ ^1.50. 




This ver^' at- 
tractive little vol- 
ume is unlike any 
other book we can 
think of. It takes 
us back to mediae- 
val times, and in- 
troduces us to the 
lords and ladies 
who then inhab- 
ited the splendid 
castle that still 
looks down from 
the heights of Mount St. Michael, on the coast of Normandy. 
It tells the pathetic story (with a happy ending) of a little boy, 
W'ho had he lived to-day would have been a genuine Little Lord 
Fauntleroy, and introduces us also to a Little Lady Fauntleroy, 
with whom we cannot help falling in love. The illustrations 
are singularly beautiful and appropriate, and make it altogether 
one of the most attractive juvenile books of recent years. 



For sale by booksellers generally, or will be sent, post-paid, on 
receipt of the price, by 

o^. C McCLURG AND CO., Publishers > 

CHICAGO. 



A Song of Life. 

By Margaret Warner Morley. With profuse 
Illustrations by the Author and by Robert 
Forsyth. Price, $1.25. 



^^..r-^ 




The plan and purpose of this work are at once very unusual 
and admirable. A special student of biology and embryology 
and a charming writer, the author also possesses the rare com- 
bination of scientific, literary, and artistic attainments which 
render such a work posssible. 

It unfolds the mystery of plant and animal existence with 
a charm of manner and delicacy of treatment that delight 
while they instruct. Mothers who read it will quickly see its 
value and will gladly put it into the hands of their sons and 
daughters, to whom its beautiful and significant " Song of 
Life" will hardly be sung in vain. 



For sale by booksellers generally, or will be sent, post-paid, cnt 
receipt of the price, by 



^A. C, McCLURG AND CO., Publishers, 

CHICAGO. 



The Story of Tonty. 

An Historical Romance. By Mary Hartwell 
Catherwood, author of ''The Romance of 
Dollard," " The Lady of Fort St. John," etc. 
Profusely Illustrated from original drawings by 
Mr. Enoch Ward. 12mo, 224 pages, $1.25. 




" The Story ot Tonty.' in which Mrs. Catherwood's genius 
for historical romance reaches perhaps its highest manifestation, 
is a Western story, beginning at Montreal, tarrying at Fort 
Frontenac, and ending at the old fort at Starved Rock, on the 
Illinois river. It weaves the adventures of the two great ex- 
plorers, the intrepid La Salle and his faithful lieutenant, Tonty, 
into a tale as thrilling and romantic as the descriptive portions 
are brilliant and vivid. It is superbly illustrated with twenty- 
three masterly drawings by Mr. Enoch Ward. 



Foj' sale by booksellers generally, or will be sent, post-paid, on 
receipt of the price, by 

J{. C. McCLURG AND CO., Publishers, 

CHICAGO. 



